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faUtrajj panitor, and fngunttttt frontal

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‘
NEWSPAPER,
INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF TIIE UNITED STATES.
A WEEKLY

REPRESENTING THE

NO. 102.

SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1867.

VOL. 4.

Bankers and Brokers.

Bankers and Brokers,

Bankers and Brokers.

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR TRAV¬

Co.,

SOUTTER &
BANKERS,
No. 53 WILLIAM STREET,

SIGHT DRAFTS ON EDINBURGH &

Dealers in Bills of Exchange, Governments, Bonds,
Stocks, Gold, Commercial Paper, and all Negotiable
Securities.
Interest allowed on Deposits subject to Sight Draft
Check.

Advances

GLASGOW.
SOLD.

EXCHANGE.

LETTERS OF CREDIT FOR THE USE

ISSUED FOB

54 William Street.

BY

Murray, Jr.,
BROKER IN

F

GANS,

&

RANK

Government and other Securities,
27 WALL

Cash

&

Dibblee

Real Capital, $1,000,000.

Capital, $150,000.

J

Howard,

BANKERS & BROKERS, i
No. 10 WALL STREET.
Government Bond* of all kinds, State and

City

other Stocks and Bonds, Gold
ana Silver bought and sold on commission.
Inter¬
est Coupons aim Dividends collected.

BANKERS,

I John M. Phillips.
Sharp.
t John Gates.

AND

Drake Kleinwort&Cohen

>

BANKERS,
*'-t
i

C. &

G-

-

SO BROAD

-,r-

/

on

STREET, NEW YORK.

At

Sight

Sixty Days; also,Circular Notea

or

L. P.

Securities and Interest,

deposits.

THE AGENCY OF THE

of

NO.

17

NASSAU

STREET.

Bills of Exchange on London
Drafts issued and hilts collected on
on the priucipal towns of Canada,
Brunswick and British Columbia.

Nova Scotia, New

Drafts fur £2 and

UNION BANK OF

Bankers and Commission Merchants f
NO. 44 BROAD STREET, NEW

YORK.

Gold
Mer¬
chants, bankers and others allowed 4 per cent, on
dep*dts. The most liberal advauces ma ie on Cot
ton. Tobacco. Ac., consigned to ourselves o* to our
correspondents, Messrs.
K. GILLIAl* & CO.,
Liverpool. '• !‘
Government Securities, Stocks. Bonds and
bought and sold on the most liberal terms.

.

Hagen,

BANKERS,

AND DEAT ERS IN BULLION,

;




SIMON DE VISSER,;

SPECIE, AND

UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
No. 1 Wall Street.

Place, New York.

AMERICAN
NO. 7 RUE SCRIBE, PARIS

LONDON,

and

principal towns and cities of

Available in all the

Europe and the East.

No. S WALL STREET, NEW YORE;
Issue Circular Letters of Credit tor Travelers

parts of Europe, etc., etc.

.

r

York.

i

.

Luvi P. Morton,

Charles E. Mujvob,

Walter H. Burns,

H. Obuoub Oaklut.

RANKERS,
STREET,
to Harrison, Garth & Co. and Henry C.

Successors

«

Hardy).

.

Government Securities, Stocks,

Bonds, Gold, etc.,

bought and sold at the “ regular” Board of Brokers
and at the Gold Exchange in person and on commis¬
sion only.

.\v;

-

Foreign aDd Domestic Exchange

collected.
——

-

*

.

--

-

E. S. Munroe &

69 & 61 WALL STREET, NEW YOHK.
Boy and sell Stocks, Bonds, Gold stud

Co.,

Securities.

Currencv,
Members of New York

Interest allowed on deposits of Gold and

Stock Exchange, Government Exchange and Long
Room of rtitto, and also of Gold Room—where all

ordersjwill he promptly attended to.

Seeurills*., Accounts of

Banka, Bankers, and Merchant* receiv¬
ed on ftvorable terms. Interest allowed <>n depos¬
its, subject to check at sight. Telegraphic quota¬
tions furnishod to correspondents.
Rktbbbhoss : James Brown, Ea*., of Messra.
Brown Brothers A Co.: John Q. Jone^Esq^ Pr£ident of the Chemical National Bank; JameeH.
Banker,' Beq., Vice-President of the Bank o* New
YorkN

j

B.A,

P. D. Roddey,
J. N. Petty,. 1,

•

R- P. Sawyers.
.

.

....

,

.

N. P. Boulett.

» •*'

80 BROADWAY & 5 NEW.ST.,
Dealers in. Government and other

subject to check at sight.

BROKERS,
Co.’s new buildings

BANKERS AND

(Messrs. Brown Bros. A

P. ,D„ Roddey

>-.

:

:

t

bought, sold and

l

Pott, Davidson & Jones,
Gevttfnment

Garth, Fisher & Hardy,

In all

Also Commercial Credits.
■-

Telegraphic orders executed for the Purchase and

No. 18 NEW

Wilson, Callaway & Co.,

Drake, Kleinwort A Cohen

Liverpool, and to grant mercantile
credits upon them for use in China, the East and
West Indies, South America, Ac, Marginal credits
of the London House issued for the same purposes.

John Munroe
& Co.,
BANKERS,

bought and sold.
San Francisco^md

upwards granted on Scotland and Ireland.

Cohen &

shipments to Messrs.

26 Exchange

AND THU

Sale of Stocks and Bonds In London and New

British North America.

Attorneys
make advances

MORTON, BURNS Sk CO.,

,

Bank

and

(58 Old Broad Street, London^

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES, LAND WARRANT’S, COL¬
LEGE LAND SCRIP, &C.
on

LIVERPOOL.

States, is prepared to

Letters of Credit for Travelers1 Use, on

30 PINE STREET,

allowed

\

.

London and

STERLING EXCHANGE

and other

Woodman,

Advances made on approved

LONDON AND
-

in the United

Members of the Stock, Gold and Government Boards,

Gold and Currency

STREET, BOSTON.

The subscriber, their representative ana

BROKERS,

Interest allowed on deposits of
subject to check at sight.

28 STATE

Co.,

L. P. Morton &

& 14 BROAD STREETS,

Dealers lit Governments
Securities.

COMPANY,

STREET, NEW YORK,

| Thos.

j

Harvey Decamp,

Bell, Faris & Co.,
12 NEW

BARING BROTHERS Sc
56 WALL

Ward,

for

agents

f Thomas Fox.

Jos. F. Larkin,
I
John Cochnower, {
general
Adam Poe,
j partnership,

Place.

S. G. & G. C.

CINCINNATI.

Bonds. Railroad and

RANKERS

f-

53 Exchange

Jos. F. Larkin & Co.,

No. 14 WALL STREET.

Dabney, ’Morgan Sc Co.,

STREET, NEW YORK.

bankers and dealers in u. s.
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES.

Co., London,

Messrs. J. S. Morgan A

made on approved securities.

B.

OF TRAV¬

ELLERS IN EUROPE AND THE EAST.

James G. King’s Sons,

Special facilities for negotiating Commercial Paper.
Collections both inland and foreign promptly made.
Foreign and Domestic Loans Negotiated.

\

.

STOCKS AND BONDS BOUGHT AND

NEW YORK.

AT THE NEW YORK STOCK

or

Travellers’ Credits.

ELLERS.
EXCHANGE ON LONDON AND PARIS.

No. 2)s Wall

& Co.,

Street, N.Y.,

(PETTY, SAWYERS & CO., Mobile, Ala.)
1
RANKERS AND BROKERS.
Q<»ld. Bonds and Stocks Bought and sold on Com’

mparticu1ar

attention

"given*'to

the Parchsse and

Sale of all southern and Misce laneoua Securities.
Collections made on all accessible points,
interest allowed on Balances. -

THE

706
.

-

.

—

Lewis Worthington,
Cashier.

J.W. Ellis, Pr«*t.

Theodore Stanwood,

—

Y.-PtuL

NATIONAL BANK

THE FIRST

Cincinnati.

of
'

-*•

a

Collections made on

National
809 A 811

«Q points WEST and SOUTH,

promptly remitted for. Capital Mock,
*1,000,000. Surplus Fund. $250,000.
Directors.—John W. Ellis, Lewis Worthington, L.
B. Harrison, William Glenn, R. M. Bishop, William
Woods, James A. Frazer, Robert Mitchell, A. 8

1U

virars

108

West Fourtli Street,

110

Sc

SILVER, UN CURRENT BANK

NOTES, and all kinds of

on

Joseph T. Bailey,

Edward B. Onta,

Nathan Hi lies,

William Ervin,
Osgood Walsh,
Frederii A Hoyt,

Benjamin Rowland, Jrn
Samuel A. Bispham,

114 STATE

BILLS OF

National Bank.

Joseph F. Mumpord, Cashier,
Late of the Philadelphia

National Bank.

fcThe Marine

NATIONAL BANK

WASHINGTON, '
D. COOKE (of Jay Cooke & Co.), Pbes’t.

HUNTINGTON, Cashier.

WM. 8.

Government Depository end Financial
Agent of the United State*.
We bny and sell all classes of Government

FOR SALE.

Company

OF CHICAGO.

President.

J. Young Scammon
Robert Reid

favorable terms, and trive
business connected
with the several departments of the
Government.
Fall information with regard to Government loans
securities on the most

especial attention to

at all times

cheerfully furnished.

Manager.

Collections
promptly attended to.

General Banking: and

ROB’T

H. MAUBT.

BANKERS AND

Bro.,

CHICAGO,

(Lake Bank of Montreal.)

BROKERS

1014 MAIN ST., RICHMOND, VA.
Sterling Exchange. Gold and Silver, Bank Notes,
State, City, and Railroad Bonds and Stocks,
bought and sold on commission.

Special attention given to collection!!.
Draw on—Drexel, Winthrop * Co., and Winslcw,
Lanier & Co., New York; Drexel & Co., Philadel¬
phia, and Bank of Montreal, Canada.
Established 1848.

Ac.,

Deposits received and

Collections made sa
A Cs.

all accessible points in the United States.
N. Y. Correspondent, Vermilye

Co.,

BANKERS,
LOUIS, MO f

Commercial Credits for the purchase of MeFchtn
dtse in England and the Continent.
Csidrs for the use of Travellers abroad.

Travillus'

Dupee, Beck
& Sayles,
BROKERS,
STOCK

No. 18

STATE STREET, BOSTON.

Gold and Ex¬
Collections made on all accessible points
promptly remitted for at current rates of ex¬

Charles D. Carr & Co.,
BROKERS,
AUGUSTA, G A•
COLLECTIONS PROMPTLY REMITTED FOR.

Dealers in Government Securities,
and

change.

L.

Co.,

Benoist &
BANKERS,

LOUIS, MISSOURI,

ST.

Exchange on all the principal cities
the United States and Canadas. Also, drafts on

Bny and Sell
of

London and Paris for sale.

National Bank.

Second

LOUIS, MO.

ST.

Capital..$200,000 | Surplus..$150,566
Prompt attention given to the business of corres¬
pondents.
E. D. JONES, Cashier.

Scott &
Late

Seott,

Kerr Sc

Co.,

LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS.
Collections made on all accessible points and re¬
mitted for on tho day of payment, Iobs current rates

exchange.
J B. Chapter, Pres.

V. Pres.
Geo. T. Clark, Cashier.
FIRST NATIONAL RANK

H. J. Roqebs,

of Denver,
DESIGNATED DEPOSITORY OF THE U. S.
- - - $500,000
Paid in Capital - * Transact a General Banking business corner of

Authorised Capital-

Exchange, Gov¬
Silver. Prompt

Dealer* in Foreign and Domestic
ernment Securities. Bonds, Gold and
aitention given to Collections.
References :

Babcock Bros A

Bankers and Biokers.

Edey Sc Co.,

Barstow,

$200,000

Goodyear Bros. & Durand, Bankers, New York.
E. n: Bulkiy A Co., Brokers, New York.
Byrd & Hall, New York.
Martin, Bates A Co., Merchants, New York.
Geo. D. H. Gillespie, late Wolff A Gillespie.
Henry A Hurlburt, late Swift & Hurlbert.
Home Insurance Company ot New York.
New York Life Insurance Company.
Aetna Insurance Company of Hartford.
Underwriters Agency New Yoik,
Ch Ties Walt-h. Pre-ident Bank of

Henry A Schroeder, Pres.

Southern Bank of Ala.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS
and Dealers In Domestic and Foreign

Exchange.

GALVESTON, TEXAS.
Special attention given to Collections of all kinds,
having prompt and reliable correspondents at all ac¬
cessible points in the State, and
REMITTANCES PROMPTLY MADE IN SIGHT
EXCHANGE AT CURRENT RATES.
National Park Bank. Howes A Macy, and Spofford
Tileston A Co., New York.
Second Nations
Bank and J. W. Seaver, Esq., Boston. Drexel i
Co. and D. S. Stetson A Co., Philadelphia. T. F
Thlrkield A Co., Cincinnati. Third National Ban!
and Jos. E. Elder A Goodwin, St Louis. Fowlei
Stanard A Co , Mobile. Pike, l<apeyre A Bro.
New Orleans. Drake, KleinworthA Cohen, Lob
Am and Liverpool.




Burke &

Union Bank,

(Chartered by the State of Tennessee.)
MEMPHIS, TENN.
Bay and 8ell Foreign and Domes tie Exchange
United States Securities, State of Tennetee, Shelby
County, and Memphis Bond*, an 1 past due Coupons.
Particular attention paid to Collections. ~
1

FROM NO. 30 TO

HAVE REMOVED
No. 36

Broad Street. Office No. 16.

GOVERNMENT AND

IN

DEALERS

OTHER SECURITIES.

Interest allowed upon
rency, subject
Merchants and

deposits of Gold and Cur¬

to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to
Bankers upon iavcrable terms.

&

Vermilye

Co.,

on

STRXRT, NEW ORLEANS,

Merchants National Bank, New
Bank of

Liverpool, England.

Collections and remittance* promptly

issues

STATES

UNITED

STOCKS

INCLUDING

6 Per Cent Bonds of 1881,
6 Per Cent 5-20 Bonds of 1862,
6
“
“
1864,
6
“
“
1865
5 Per Cent 10-40 Bonds,

7 3-10 Per Cent Treasury Notes, 1st,
6 Per Cent Currency Certificates.

New York State 7 per cent.

2d, & 3d series*

Bounty Loan.

Compound Interest Notes of 1864*
1865 Bought and Sold.
VERMILYE & CO.

Warren, Kidder & Co.,
BANKERS,
ST., NEW YORK.
Orders for stocks, Bonds, and Gold promptly exe¬
cuted. FOUR PER CENT. INTEREST ALLOWED
on deposits, subject to check at sight.
Haslett McKim.

Robt. McKim.

Jno. A. McKm.

McKim, Bros. & Co.,
BANKERS
62 WALL STREET.
Interest allowed on deposits subject

eighr, and special attention given to
other places.

Gelston &

to draft at

orders from

Bussing,

BANKERS Sc BROKERS
27 WALL STREET
All orders receive onr 1’ersoual Attention.

r John S. Bussing

Wm. J. Gelsto

22

Draw

hand forofimmediate delivery all

John Bloodgood & Co.,

Co.,

BANKERS,
54 CAMP

Street. New Vork,

No. 44 Wall

Keep constantly on

No. 4 WALL

Mobile.

Blake and F. Sts. DENVER COLORADO#

Citizens’

Sc BROKERS,

BANKERS

LIBERAL ADVANCES MADE ON GOVERN¬
MENT STOCKS TO BANKS AND BANKERS.

Co., Bankers, New York.

T. H. McMahan & Co.

Co.,

BANKERS,

of

Jas. M. Muldon
& Sons,
St., Mobile, Ala.
No. 52 St. Francis

A.

HENRY SAYLES

JAMES BECK,

JAMES A. DUPEE,

BANKERS.

ST.

change.

CO., PARIS.

▲Leo issue

BANKERS AND

Haskell &

AND

JOHN MUNROE Sc

No.

Geo. C. Smith &
48 LASALLE ST.,

& Co.,

R. H. Maury

NORTH-WESTERN STATES
B.NK or

BOB’T T. BROOKE

JA8, L. MAURY.

EXCHANGE ON LONDON
r

Washington.
H.

Franklin Bank,

H. Manry * Co.,

Richmond, Ya^ Charles D. Carr A Co. Augusta, Ga.

Page, Richardson
& Co,
STREET, BOSTON,

OF

UNION BANK OF LONDON

Drexel * Co^Philadelphia; The
and Johnston Bros., Baltimore; R.

Eastern Bankers.

William H. Rhawn, President,
*
Late Cashier of the Central

FIRST

BANK NOTES, 8T0CKS, AND BuNDSL ^
Especial attention paid to Collections.
Refer to Dancan, Sberman A Co., New York:

'

directors:

accessible points

nd remitted for on day of payment.
Checks

Banka and

GOVERNMENT BONDS,

COLLECTIONS MADE at all

RANKERS Sc DEALERS
IN FOREIGN* DOMESTrO EXCHANGE,SPECIE.

liberal terms*

William H. Rhawn.

CINCINNATI, OHIO.
sealers in GOLD,

te

semees

Charleston, S. 0.,

He. A Broad Street,

,

$1,000,000

Capital
Bankers on

Co.,

CHESTNUT STREET,

PHILADELPHIA.

Winslow.

Wilson, ;>

Conner &

Republic,

Bank of the

and

Gilmore, Dunlap &

Bankers.

Southern

Southern Bankers.

Bankers.

Western

[June 8,1867.

CHRONluLE.

York, and

attended to.

WILLIAM STREET, NEW

DEALERS

IN

OTHER
Interest allowed on

YORK.

GOVERNMENT AND
SECURITIES.

deposits of Gold and Carreu

2Uonsubject
toaccounts
check atofsight,
andhanks
particular
atten
given to
country
and bankers

±HR CHRONICLE.

8,1867.]

Jnnfe

Financial.

Bankers and Brokers.

W. H. Whittingham,
No. 8 Broad

-

TOT

Street,

JAY

1

COOKE,

WM. G.
H. D.

C H. C. FAHNESTOCK,
EDWARD DODGE,

*

MOORHEAD,' V

•?

)

COOKE,

Bankers and Brokers.

•

(PITT COOKE.

Jay Cooke & Co.,

MINING,
EXPRESS.
RAILROAD,

AND ALL OTHER
„

,

STOCKS,
BONDS AND GOLD

Corner Wall and Nassau

Quotations and sales lists furnished daily on appli¬
Orders promptly executed.

cation.

Farnham,

No. 114 South 3d

Street,

COMMISSION.

of

OppositeTreas. Department.

ALSO,

SOLD

^

New York.

Washington.

In connection with our houses in Philadelphia and
Washington we have this day opened an office at No.
1

Nassau,
Mr.

corner

BROADWAY, NEW YORK,
Bankers and Brokers.

Bonds, Government

Securities and Gold

bought and sold at market rates, on
Interest

be resident partners.

We shall give particular attention to the purchase,
sale,

commission only.

and exchange of

all issues ; to

government securities

Fargo & Co., and Merchants’
All orders faithfully executed.

Union Express Stocks.

JAY COOKE & CO.
March 1,1806.

,

.

Co.,

Co.,

Gilliss, Harney & Co.,
BANKERS,
NO. 24 BROAD STREET.
Buy and Sell at Market Rates.

SECURITIES,

All the Government Loans for sale.

Collections made for Dealers

NOTES.

Lockwood & Co.,

Capital

DEALERS

GOVERNMENT

IN

AND

SECURITIES

OTHER

The Tradesmens
••*••••*•

Tenth National Bank.

and Bankers upon

\

RANKERS Sc

Government

Securities, Stocks, Bonds,

and Gold, bought and sold on

.

Commission.
COMMERCIAL paper and loans op gold
AND CURRENCY NEGOTIATED.
NOS. 12 NEW Sc 14 BROAD STREETS.

No. 29 BROAD STREET.

favorable terms.

Designated Depository of the Government. Bankers,

Rodman, Fisk & Co.,
Dealers

in

NO.
Six per

Securities

Government
NASSAU

18

STREET,

Buy and sell at market rates:
Cent. Bonds of 1881; Ten-Forties ;
Five-Twenty Bonds, all issues ;
Seven-Thirty Notes, all series

and Dealers’ Accounts solicited.
D. L. t
J. H. Stout, Cashier.

Joseph A. Jameson,
Amos Cotting,
Of Jameson, Cotting & Co.
St. Louis.

DEALERS IN

STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, Sc GOVERN
MENT

SECURITIES.

No. 19 Broad

Street, New York.

Drake Brothers,
STOCKBROKERS AND BANKERS,
YORK,
Buy and Sell on Commission Government Securities
Gold, Railroad, Bank and State Stocks and Bonds,
Steamship, Telegraph, Express, Coal, Petroleum, and
Mining Stocks.
Currency and Gold received on deposit subject to
Draft. Dividends and Interest collected and Invest¬
No. 16 BROAD STREET, NEW

ments made.

Orders

Promptly Execnted

j

James D. Smith,

of the late firm of James

Low & Co., New York
and Louisville, Ky.

BANKERS,

NOS. 14 & 16

Gold and Silver Coin.

Registered Interest Collected .and Coupons cashed

without charge.
7-80 Notes, all series,

taken in exchange for the new
Consolidated 5-20 Bonds, on terms advantageous to

holders of 7-SOs.
Merchants and

|

OSS, President.

Jameson, Smith & Cotting
;

Importers supplied with coin for cus¬

tom-duties at lowest market rates.
Orders for purchase and sale of all miscellaneous
securities promptly executed.
Mail and telegraph
orders will receive our personal attention. Deposits
received, and interest allowed on balances. Collections
made on all points with quick returns.

RODMAN, FISK & CO.

Jackson Brothers,

$1,000,000.

Capital

Compound Interest Notes, and

Jones & Westervelt,
BROKERS,

RANK.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
CAPITAL
$1,000,000
URPLUS....
...
400,000
RICHARD BERRY, President.
ANTHONY HALSEY, Cashier.

deposits of Gold and Currency,
subject to Check at Sight. Gold loaned to Merchants

STREET,
*

WHEELOCK, President.

William H. Sanford, Cashier.

Interest allowed upon

'

J

83,000,000.

No. 94 BROADWAY & No. 6 WALL STREET.

AND

AND
BANKER
BROKER,
In Southern Securities and Bank Bills.

best terms.

Central National Bank,

NATIONAL

BANKERS,

Q. Bell,

on

391

RANKERS.

all UNITJEO STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS and
others, and allow interest on daily balances, subject to
Sight draft.
Make collections on favorable terms,
And promptly execute orders for the Purchase or Sale
of Gold, State, Federal and Railroad Securities.

M BROADWAY A 5 NEW
*
New York.

STREET, N. E. CORNER PINE STREET

\

GOVERNMENT

ax* YABimsu.

Edwin

NASSAU

Canadas.

AND GOLD.

’**•

$5,000,000

Capital

descriptions of Government Bonds^
City and County accounts received on terms most fa¬
vorable to our Correspondents.
Collections made in all parts of the United States an i

BOUGHT AND BOLD ON COMMISSION,

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN GOV¬
ERNMENT SECURITIES, STOCKS

BANK

National Bank.

WILLIAM A.

NEW YORK.

SOUTHERN

Fourth

Has for sale all

STOCKS AND BONDS

No. 10 Wall Street,

-

•

318 BROADWAY.

Satterlee &

10 BROADWAY A 15 NEW STREET.

|

sale

of

orders for purchase and sale of stocks,
and to all business of National Banks.

JOSIAH HEDDEN,
ISAIAH C. BABCOCK,
LOCKE W. WINCHESTER, ROBT. M. HEDDEN.

Van Schaick &

or

bonds and gold,

allowed on balances. Advances made on ap¬

proved securities.
Particular attention given to orders for the purchase
or sale of the Adams, American, United States, Wells,

Securities.

|Edward Dodge, late of Clark, Dodge & Co.»

House, and Mr. Pitt Cooke, of Sandusky, Ohio, will

NO. 69

promptly execute orders for the Purchase

Gold, State, Federal, and Railroad

of Wall Street, in this city.

New York, Mr. H. C. Fahnestock, of our Washington

Hedden, W inchester&Co

ILL UNITED STATES SECURITIES.
Solicit accounts from MERCHANTS, BANKERS, and
others, and allow interest on dally balances, subject to
Sight Draft.
Make Collections on favorable terms,
and

PAPER,

STOCKS, BONDS, GOLD, &c., BOUGHT AND
48 Pine Street,

Street,
Philadelphia.

Fifteenth

Street, New York.

Buy and Sell at Market Rates,

New York,

(Late of G. S. Robbins & Son,)

COMMERCIAL

Stocks,

No. 39 Broad

Sts.,

Bought and Sold on Commission.

6n

BANKERS AND BROKERS,

BANKERS.

TELEGRAPH,

George

Taussig, Fisher & Co.,

Receive

WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

Deposits in Currency and Gold,

and allow Interest at the rate
per annum on
for at sight.

Will

of FOUR PER CENT

daily balances which may be checked

purchase and sell Gold, Bonds and Stocks strictly

and only on Commission.

Hatch, Foote & Co.,
RANKERS

ADAMS, KIMBALL Sc MOORE,
-BANKERS,

Street, New York.
Buy and Sell at Market Rates GovernmenUSecuritles,
of all issues, and execute orders for the purchase and
No. 14 Wall

sale of STOCKS, BONDS, and GOLD.
Interest allowed on deposits of Gold

and Currency,

subject to check at sight.

AND

DEALERS IN GOVERNMENT ISECURITIES,

GOLD, &c.
SEVEN-THIRTY NOTES exchanged for
FIVE-TWENTY BONDS, on the most liberal

All issues of
the

new

terms, and without delay.
IMPORTERS and others supplied with GOLD at mar
ket rates,

Tyler, Wrenn & Co.,

aud Coin on hand for immediate delivery.
No. 12 WALL STREET.

BANKERS,

NO.

18

WALL

STREET,

Buy and Sell at most liberal rates, GOVERNMENT
SECURITIES, GOLD, &c. Orders for purchase and
sale of Stocks, Bonds and Gold promptly executed.

.TI LER, ULLMANN A: CO.

T. A.

C. Graham,

3 BROAD

AND

BROKER,

BROKER,

STREET, NEW YORK,

Chicago.

Hoyt,

GOUD AND EXCHANGE

A.

BANKER

dealer in

Foreign and Domestic Exchange,
Southern Bills on London and Paris,
Bills on Memphis, New Orleans and Mobile.

36 NEW AND 38 BROAD STREETS.

J. L. Brownell & Bro.,

BANKERS Sc BROKERS,
28 BROAD STREET, NEW YORK.
Stocks, Bonds, Government Securities and Gold
Bought and Sold exclusively on commission.
Accounts of Banks, Bankers and Individuals received
on
.

•

favorable terms.

KeF£BB^O£8*
H. FoNDAtPres. National Mech. Banking Ass., N.Y.
B. Blais, Pres’t Merchants’ Nat. Bank, Chicago. ,




Orders executed for Bankers, Brokers and Merchants.

C.

POWELL, GREEN Sc CO.

Bankers

& Commission

MERCHANTS,
88 BROAD

RANKER,
AND DEALER IN BULLION AND SPECIE,

24 Nassau

STREET, NEW YORK.

Stocks. Bonds and Governments bought
clusively on Commission^

P. Hayden,

land sold ex¬
...

,

Street, New York.

The Specie Department will be in charge
of J. S. Cbonise (late of J. S. Cronise & Co.), who has
my authority to sign the Firm name by procuration,
V
,

[June 8,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

708

Bankers and Brokers.

Financial.
the

Fisk &

Hatch,

Union Pacific Railroad

BANKERS
AND DEALERS IN

GOVERNMENT AND OTHER
New York,

RECOMMEND

Are now

TO INVESTORS THE

FIRST MORTGAGE BONUS

OF THE

The Central

constructing a

OMAHA,

Railroad from

Bonds, ^
Gold, and

.

Government

NEBRASKA,

westward towards the Pacific

BOUGHT AND SOLD ON

Ocean, making, with Its

connections, an unbroken line

Pacific Railroad Co.,
This Company is constructing1,
age of the UNITED STATES

ACROSS THE

under tbe patron¬

The

%

GOVERNMENT

END OF THE

THE WESTERN

GREAT NATIONAL RAILWAY
ACROSS THE CONTINENT.
Their line will extend from Sacramento, Califor¬
nia, acn>SB the Sierra Nevadas to tne California
State line, travel sing the richest and most popu¬
lous t-ECTioN of

California, and thence through
TERRITORIES,

SIX PER CENT. IN




First —Tfie rate of Interest is Six per

Cent. In
Gold, payaDle semi-annually in ihe City oi New

York

Second.—The
mat.ur ty.

Principal is payable in Gold at

Third.—The cost of the Bonds, Ninety-five Per
Cent, and accrued interest, is Ten Per Cent,
les- than that of the cheapest Six Per Cent. Gold
Bearing bonds of the Government.
Fourth.—Tlie United States Government

provide- nearly half tbe amount ne¬
cessary to bu id tbe entire road, and
look- mainly t * « small per-centage
on

tbe future

traffic for re-payment.

Fifth.—Owing to this liberal provision, accompa¬
nied with Extensive Grant- of Public

Lands, by which tne Government fosters this
great national enterpri-e. its success is ren¬
dered certain, and its financial sta¬
bility is altogether independent of
tbe contingencies which attend ordi¬

Railroad enterprises.

nary

The Secnriry of its First Mortgage
R»nds is therefore ample, and their character
for safety and reliability is equalled only by toat of
the obligat ons of the Government itself.

Sixth.

the completed
portion are already largely in excess of
tbe lute«est obligations which 'lie
Company will incu> on twice tbe dis¬
tance- an i are steadily increasing, rendering the
uninterrupted payment of tbe Inte¬
rest absolutely certain.

Seventh.—The

net

earnings

of

of Gold they pay near¬
ly *x Per Cent, per annum, on tue amount in¬

Eighth.—At V e present rate
vested.

The Bouds are issued in denominations of $1,000
with semi-annual Gold Coupons attached, pa> able
in New York, aud are offered lor the present at 95
per cen

.

and accrued interest [in currency) from.

January 1st

Orders may

be torwarded to us director through the

principal banks and Bankers in all parts of the
country.

Remittances nry be made in drafts on New York,
in Legal Tender Notes, National Bank Notes or
other funds current in this city, and the bonds will
be forwarded to any address by express, free ot

or

charge.

Inquiries for further particulars, by mail or

otherwise, will receive punctual attention.

Fisk & Hatch,

N.B.—All kinds of

STREET, N.Y.

Government Securities ie
price in exchange for the

Also,

fSfGold Coin and U. S. Coupons bought,

sold,

Deposits received on Liberal Terms,
subject to cheek at sight.
t3g*“* Collections made throughout the countiy.
tS^’Miscellaneocs Stocks and Bonds bought and
and sold at the Stoc* Exchange on commission for

cash.
Special attention giver to the Exchange of SEVEN
THIRTY NOTES qf all the eerie* for the new FIVE
7 WENTY BONDS qf 1865, <?n the meet favorable
'

This road was

completed from Omaha 805 miles west

the 1st of

remaining portion to the eastern base of the Rocky
Mountains, 212 miles, which is under contract to be done
September 1st of this year, and it is expected that the
entire road will be in running order from Omaha to its
western connection with the Central Pacific, now being

rapidly built eastward from Sacramento,

STREET,
(Established 1854.)

*9 WALL

January, 18G7, and is fully equipped, and
trains are regularly running over it. The Company
has now on hand sufficient iron, ties, etc., to finish the
on

Cal.,_during

Members of the New

Means of the Company.

Estimating the distance to be built by the Union Pa¬
cific to be 1,505 miles, the United States Government
issues its Six per cent. Thirty-year Bonds to the Com¬
pany as the road is finished at the average rate of about
$28,250 per mile, amounting to $44,208,000.
Company is also permitted to issue its own First
Mortgage Bonds to an equal amount, aud at the same
time, which, by special Act of Congress, are made a
First Mortgage on the entire line, the bonds of the
The

United States being subordinate to them.

allowed

on

Balances, subject to check at sight.
WHITE, MORRIS & CO.

The Government makes a donation of

Memphis, Tenn.

12,800 acres of

amounting to 20,082,000 acres, estima
$30,000,000, making the total resources,
exclusive of the capital, $118,416,000; but the full value

of the lands cannot now be realized.
The authorized Capital Stock of the Company is one
hundred million dollars, of which five millions have

already been paid in, and of which it is not supposed
that more than twenty-five millions at most will be re¬
quired.
by competent engi¬
hundred million dollars, exclu¬

The cost ofthe road is estimated
neers

to be about one

sive of

equipment.

BANKERS AND BROKERS,
38 BROAD STREET AND 36 NEW STREET.
Government Securities of all kinds, Gold,

State, Dank, and Railroad Stocks and
Bonds Bought and Sold.
Interest allowed on
Deposits subject to check at sight. Collections
made in all the States and Canadas.

Gibson,Beadleston & Co.,
BANKERS,

50

now

Pacific

on

Government Securities, Stocks, Bonds and Gold,
bought and sold, ONLY on Commission, at the Stock,
Mining Stock and Gold Boards, of which we are mem¬
bers.

Interest allowed on

Deposits.

Dividends, Coupons ana Interest collected.
Liberal advances on Government and other Securities
Information cheerfully given to Professional men,
Executors, etc., desiring to invest.
Refer by

permission to

| Me®8r£;Morgan5& Co.

and the

complete, and the earnings, of the Union
already finished for the first two
weeks in May were $113,000. These sectional earnings
as the road progresses will much more than pay the in
terest on the Company’s bonds, and the through busi¬
ness over the only line of railroad between the Atlan¬

East is

EXCHANGE PLACE, NEW YORK.

Winslow, Lanier & Co.,*

Prospects for Business.
The railroad connection between Omaha

& Loring,.

Foute

ted to be worth

bankers,

the sections

2T Sc 29 Pine
DRAW ON LONDON

tic and Pacific must be immense.

Valne and

Street, New York*
AND PARIS,

Security ofthe Ronds.

Company respectfully submit, that the above
statement of facts fully demonstrates the security of
their Bonds, and as additional proof they would sug
gest that the Bonds now offered are less than ten mil
lion dollars on 517 miles of road, on which over twenty
million dollars have already been expended; on 830
mile8 of this road the cars are now running, and the re¬
maining 187 miles are nearly completed.
present rate of premium on gold these bonds
annual interest on the present cost of
Nine per

cent.,

and it is believed that on the completion of the road,
like the Government Bonds, they will go above par.

Company intend to sell but a limited amount at
present low rates, and retain the right to advance
price at their option.

Issue Circular Letters

No. 7 Nassau St.
Clark, Dodge & Co., Bankers, 51 Wall St.
John J. Cisco & Son, Bankers, No. 38 Wall St.

JOHN J.

CISCO, Treasurer.
NEW YORK,

<

& Co.,

BANKERS,
CORNER OF PINE AND NASSAU
CIRCULAR NOTES AND CIRCULAR
OF CREDIT,
For the use of Travelers abroad aud in

ST8.,

LETTERS
the United

States, available in all the principal cities of the
world; also,
COMMERCIAL CREDITS,
For use in Europe, east of the Cape of Good Hope,
West Indies, South America, and the United States.

Riker & Co.,
BROKERS IN
NO. 5 NEW

pamphlets maybe obtained. They will also be sent by

of the bonds.

Deposits.

Duncan, Sherman

BANKERS generally through¬
of whom maps and descriptive

Company’s Office, No. 20 Nassau street,
New York, on application.
Subscribers will select
their own Agents in whom they have confidence, who
alone will be responsible to them for the safe delivery

Travellers, avail¬

parts of Europe.

Interest Allowed on

Continental National Bank,

mail from the

of Credit for

able in all

Subscriptions will be received in New York by the

and by BANKS AND
out the United States,

MOBILE AND

NEW ORLEANS.

The

the

W. W. Loring.

A. M. Foute,
Late Pres. Gayoso Bank,

land to the mile,

The

York Stock Exchange, Gold Ex¬

change. and Mining Board.
Dealers iu Government Securities. Special atten¬
tion given to Collections. Four per cent interest

*

1S70.

the

All descriptions of GovernmentSecurltics kc pt constantly on band, and
Bought S<>ld or Exchanged.
and collected.

White, Morris & Co.,

At the

coived at the full market
above Bonds.

RANKING HOUSE OF

Ninety Cents on the Dollar.

pay an

BANKERS AND DEALERS IN
GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,
NO. 5 NASSAU

MINING STOCKS,
New York.
Deposits received, subject to Check, and Interest al¬
lowed.
A. HAWLEY HEATH.
T. W B HUGHES,
Member of Is. 1. Stock Ex.
13 Broad Street,

GOLD,

AT

Their road is

reasons, viz :

and

RAILROAD AND

GOLD,

having thirty years to run, and hearing annual Interest
payable on the first day of January and July in the
City of New York, at the rate of

It forms the sole Western link: of the only
roure to the Pacific which is adopted by Congress
and aided, by tne Issue of United States
Ronds.

already completed, equipped, and
rnnning for 94 miles Irom Sacramento to within 12
miles of tho summit of the Sierras, and a large
amount of the work of Grading, Tunnelling, &c.,
beyond that point has been accomplished.
The First Mortgage Bonds of this Com¬
pany afford uuusual inducements of Saiety and
Profit to Investors, for the following among other

BANKERS ^COMMISSION BROKERS
IN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES,

'

the GREAT MINING REGIONS t F THE
to the vicinity of Salt Lake City.

COMMISSION,

Heath & Hughes,

amount of their

Mortgage Bonds

First

Securities,

Hshrt Ds Cofpit.

tom H. Jaoquzldv.

CONTINENT.

Company now offer a limited

STREET, N.Y.

NO. S6 NEW

Railroad Stocks,

Company,

DESIRABLE SECURITIES,
No. 5 Nassau Street,

Jacquelin & De Coppet,

'

L. S.
NO. 11

MINING STOCKS,
BROADWAY.

STREET and 80

Watkins,

BROAD STREET,

NEW YORK,

BANKER,
And Dealer in all Classes
ment Securities and
Collectioas wade in

J*
Govern¬
Gold.

all parts of the United States

British America,

and

ommfrrjaj & ijlinanria
§anfeer$’ fcctte, Commercial ^iraes, ftailwatj ponitor, and ^n$urance goumal.
WEEKLY

A

NEWSPAPER,

9

REPRESENTING THE INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL INTERESTS OF THE UNITED STATES.

NO. 102

SATURDAY, JUNE 8, 1867.

VOL. 4.

As it is we know pretty fully
mischief; and in this case as in ten thousand
others, to know the evil is to cure it.
Rarely, indeed, have the doings of the Treasury for a
single month presented so many serious anomalies, or been
so difficult of vindication.
By our comparative tables which
comparatively in the dark.

CONTENTS.

the extent of the
THE CHRONICLE.

Publicity and the National Debt
Winding up of the State Bank

PubUc Debt, of the United States

709

Latest Monetary

710

English News

Gold Exports

711

Cleveland, Painesville and Ash¬
tabula Railroad

Commercial and
News

711

Currency

712

and Commercial

712
Miscellaneous
714

THE BANKERS’ GAZETTE AND COMMERCIAL TIMES.

Foreign Exchange, New York
City Banks. Philadelphia Banks
National Banks, etc
.

Sale Prices N.Y. Stock

Exchange

Commercial Epitome.

720
7 1
722
723

Cotton
Tobacco
Breadstuff's
Groceries.,...

Xoney Market, Railway Stocks,
U. S. Securities, Gold Market,

Dry Goods
Imports

715

718
719

724
725

•

r

Prices Current and Tone of the
Market
732-33

THE RAILWAY MONITOR AND INSURANCE JOURNAL.

Railway News
Railway, Canal, etc.. Stock List.
Railroad, Canal, and Miscellane-

726 1
727

62SV29
730
.705-08, 731, 734-36

ops Bond List
Insurance and Mining Journal

'} Advertisements

...

.

CJjronicU.
Thb Commercial

and

place on another page, it will be seen
balance in the Treasury has increased
$38,827,606, or more than a million a day on the average.
The paralysis produced in business by locking up currency in
large amounts, and suddenly abstracting it from the current
of the circulation, have been ofbm shown since the memorable
occasiou when Mr. Chase in 1864, “ to knock gold down,”
was induced against his better judgment to adopt this mis¬
chievous expedient, and brought on a panic in which more
occupy their usual
hat the currency

than

Financial Chronicle is issued every

Satur¬

to

a

hundred millions of

have been sacrificed.

private property are estimated

The influence conferred by the control

day morning by the publishers of Hunt's Merchants' Magazine, of the volume of our paper money, and the absolute power
with the latest news up to midnight of Friday.
it gives over the movements of business, the course of prices,
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION—PAYABLE IN ADVANCE.
the fortunes of private citizens, the rise or fall of stocks, pro¬
For The Commercial and Financial Chronicle, delivered by carrier
to city subscribers, ana mailed to all others, (exclusive of postage,)
duce, merchandise of every kind—all this power is too much
ForOne Year
;
$10 *H»
For Six Mouths
6 00 to be placed in hands where it can be exercised even for a
By an arrangement with the publishers of the Daily Bulletin we are
few weeks in secret. The eye of the public should be ever
enabled to furnish our subscribers with that paper at the reduced price
on the movements of the currency, the increase or decrease
of $4 per annum making the price of
.

Cbroniclk with Daily

Bulletin,-j

sL-fMontha'.'.".:'.'.'.;".'.::: *'! 00

Postage is paid by the subscriber at his own post-officer It ts, on the Chroni¬
cle, 20 cents per year, and on the Daily Bulletin $1 20 in advance.
WILLIAM B. DANA & CO, Publishers,
60 William Street, New York.

THE DAILY BULLETIN

ENLARGED,

which constitute, as

it

were,

the thermometer of prices, the

regulator of values, the standard measure controlling all
exchanges between buyer and seller. But the value of pub¬
licity is only one of the lessons taught us by the June state¬
ment

of the National debt.

The

During the past week the Daily Bulletin has been enlarged to more than
Let us advance to a second point of interest.
current
Ihis became necessary on account of its gro’wing
of the circulating money having been depleted some 40
popularity and tho desire of the publishers to furnish subscribers with a com¬
The taxes paid into the In¬
plete daily record of the commercial and financial markets of the city, which lions—how has it been done ?
was impossible within the former limits of the paper.
In making the change ternal RevenueDepartment were not sufficient, not a
some new features have been added which will, we think, largely increase its
lar
had
been
disbursed.
How, then, has Mr. McCulloch
usefulness. It is to be published hereafter by “ The Daily Bulletin Associa¬

double its late dimensions

mil¬

if

tion” but will still be furnished to the subscribers

rate, as may he seen in the terms given

of the Chronicle at a reduced

above.

PUBLICITY AND THE DEBT STATEMENT.
The

advantages of publicity in reference to

the National
illustration.

the doings of

Treasury have just received a conspicuous
For some weeks past indications of a positive

being withdrawn
in the Treasury vaults to

character seemed to show that currency was

from the circulation and locked up

effected the transfer of 40 millions

dol¬

from the pockets of the

people to the vaults of the Treasury ? A glance at the offi¬
cial table answers the question. He has converted and sold
for cash more than 61 millions of Five-twenty bonds, and
has sold them at a low price in order to attract buyers,
and to get rid of them at the average rate of twro millions a
day. He has made a concession in price in order to stimu¬
late purchases.
That the Secretary has sold these bonds for
less than they would have fetched if they had not been hurried
into the market is proved by the fact that during the three
or four days which have elapsed since he stopped selling, the
price has gone up A per cent. This A Per cent, might ap¬

such rapidity, that the with¬
drawal cramped business, checked the symptoms of re¬
covery which were making incipient efforts to develop them¬
selves, and at almost any other time of the year might have
produced a temporary panic. The pi oofs that something parently have been gained for the Treasury had not so much
wrong was goiug on were talked over in financial circles, and urgency been used in getting in the currency rapidly, and
they were freely canvassed by the press; but if we had had had the sales of the new Five twenty long bonds been allow¬
no such means
Auditing Mr. McCtllloch’s accounts as the ed to run on gradually to 40 or 45 millions, to correspond
short obligations withdrawn, instead of bsing forced
monthly debt Statement affords; vr£ should still have been i with the
so

large

an




extent, and with

-

-

t

THE

710

[June 8, 1867.

CHRONICLE.

in four weeks. twenty millions of old State bank currency, of which it is
Thirdly, we may enquire why this sacrifice has been' sub¬ supposed that one-half or ten millions has been lost or de¬
mitted to.
For what purpose has so much currency been stroyed. The profit from the destruction of this amount will
of course accrue to the banks which have issued it. As for
hoarded up by a costly and mischievous process ] To what
the remaining ten millions of notes they are rapidly going
pressing emergency is it due that not only 8 per cent, inter¬
out of the hands of the public.
Under the operation of the
est is paid for immense sums of money to be kept idle in the
Government coffers, but that the ordinary balance is swelled ten per cent, tax, which prevents any bank from paying
them out, the State bank notes are returning home for re¬
by the sale of bonds for cash at a sacrifice ? The accumula¬
tion cannot be necessary for the extraordinary payments on demption, and may virtually be considered as forming no part
of our circulating money. The country may thus be congratu¬
account of Compounds and Seven-thirties.
For, as we showed
last week, these payments during the entire months of June lated on an early riddance of the mixed and unsafe currency
and July will require but 40 millions, all of which Con¬ of the old banks, much of which was totally unsecured by
the deposit of bonds, and was so exempt from proper regu¬
gress was careful to provide for by directing that the
annual taxes should be paid earlier than usual this year. lation as to be productive of much financial embarrassment
We do not offer any explanation of the problem.
The fol¬ and confusion.
It is one of the triumphs of the National Banking system,
lowing extract from a morning paper gives a fair view of what
is thought of the affair by those who usually approve and and is a compensation for its numerous defects that it pre¬
served us from the uncontrollable and very serious evils
support Mr. McCulloch's general policy :
which in a paper money era could not have failed to sub¬
The finances of the mouth have the appearance of gross improvidence,
eventuating in a currency balance at the close of the month almost merge the country in general bankruptcy had the old banks
double that of the 30th April—the result, we take it, of large sales of
not been taxed out of existence, and their place supplied by
United States Five-twenties in the
of the ability of the Treasury
to re-invest the proceeds in Seven thirties or Compounds.
The differ¬ institutions, whose inflating powers should be repressed and
is
twenty millions, and the effect has fallen chiefly, week by
week, on the New York money market, aud in a two-fold measure- kept rigidly in check by uniform laws all over the country.
up

to the extraordinary figure of 61 millions

excess

ence

over

first, by locking up this excess in the currency in the Treasury, and
secondly by making the brokers in the public fuuds, both great and
small, the principal borrowers of money at bank and on the street, at
extreme rates of interest, in their extreme competition as buyers at the
Treasury, and their anxiety to turn a trifling rate of commission on large
sums.
That this state of things should not have been realized at Wash¬
ington until the close of the month, or rather until the very day (June
8 or 4) of making
up the monthly schedule of the public debt, is not
only surprising, but the subject of mortification, we have no doubt, to
the Secretary of the Treasury, as well as a useful lesson for his future
government in funding his temporary obligations. We feel quite sure
the blunder will not be repeated, and to guard more strictly against its
recurrence, it is to be hoped that less latitude will be allowed in future
as between the
daily sales or engagements and exchanges of the Fivetwenties, and the purchase and exchange of Seven-thirties and Com¬
pounds. The eager and persistent applications of the brokers in govern¬
ment securities in May, to engage the Five-twenties in advance of their
own sales, have
undoubtedly wrought the present discrepancy. It was
not the result of favoriteism as between the large and smaller brokers
in government securities, we dare
say. * It is more likely that the ex¬
cessive sales of Five-twenties were run up by the anxiety of the officials
of the
Treasury to accommodate all parties, and to avoid even the
semblance to

partiality.

We repeat

that

do not venture any solution of our
singular anomaly. It is well that by the pub¬
licity to which the Treasury doings are subjected the mis¬
take was so soon discovered, and that the
unnecessary mischief
which might otherwise have been done has been averted.
The fact is that the business of the Treasury, as at
present
organized, is too complicated, too vast, and involves respon¬
sibility too extensive for the Secretary to be personally
cognizant of, or blameable for every error, however impor
tant, that may occur in the details of administration.
<nwn

we

to this

WINDING UP OF THE STATE BANK CURRENCY SYSTEM.
It is not

generally known that the notes of New England
are now at a discount of 5
per cent. The rea¬
son of this
heavy depreciation is that at Boston the Suffolk
Bank and the Bank of Mutual Redemption have discontinued
redeeming such notes since the first of June. As the amount
outstanding is small, and as there is now no method of
getting payment without sending the notes to the several
banks by mail or by
express, the uncurrent money brokers
make the extra charges to cover the delay,
expense and
State banks

trouble involved.

The notes of the banks of

and those of the Western States

of

are

Pennsylvania,

selling at various rates

got rid of, our currency
system, though still far from perfection, is probably more
efficient than any paper-money system which has ever been
Now that the State bank notes

are

operation in any country during a suspension of specie
payments. It consists of 400 millions of government money
and 300 millions of bank notes, the latter being secured by
in

government bonds, and redeemed in

legal tenders on demand.

which pass freely at par
added 130 millions of three

To these 700 millions of currency,

State in the Union, are
year compound notes, which though legal tender for their
face, carry accrued interest enough to prevent their passing
from hand to hand to inflate prices. They thus perform
none of the functions of currency except that some 85 mil’
lions are held by the banks as reserve instead of greenbacks*
These compound notes have done good service in supplying
the place of the old five per cent legal tenders, which were
extremely unpopular because they deranged the currency by
alternately becoming active when they lost their half-yearly
coupons, and inert when a little interest had accrued upon
them.
The compound notes were exempt from such defects;
but having no interest payable on them until maturity, they
were at their first issue quite as active in the circulating cur¬
rent as were the coupon five per cent, legal tenders, whose
place they supplied; but bearing interest at 6 per cent.,
they soon began to be held as an investment. Hence they
gradually contracted the circulation, and reduced it in a
gentle, safe, easy, permanent manner.
From this general sketch it is easy to see that our cur¬
rency system meets two or three of the prime requisites for
a National circulation.
These requisites are—first, perfect
security for ultimate redemption, which is attained in refer¬
ence to the 300 millions of bank note circulation by the de¬
posit of bonds in Washington; and in reference to the rest
of the outstanding notes—both the greenbacks and the com¬
pounds—by the faith and credit of the Government, which is
the highest possible security that can be had in any country.
The second requisite for a sound currency is that there shall
be no discount on any part of the circulation; that it shall
pass freely everywhere at par. It is doubted by financial
writers whether this can be best attained by a Govern¬
ment circulation, issued from one centre, or by a local circula¬
tion, originating from many issuing centres. We have
in every

discount, wrhile those of the State of New York will
probably cease next month to be redeemed by the Metro¬
politan Bank of this city, and will then speedily disappear bridged over the difficulty by adopting a composite system
from circulation.
combining the two plans. We thus have a Government cir¬
We are informed that there is afloat at
present about culation which comprises two-thirds of the whole amount.




June

THE CHRONICLE.

1807.3

from Washington ; the remaining third part,
or local circulation, is issued by the banks; and general cur¬
rency is given to the bank notes by their being legal
tender from the banks to the Government, and receivable by
the Treasury for all public dues.
A third requisite is that the amount of the circulation shall
be kept equal to the requirements of the country at different
parts of the year ; its volume expanding or contracting with
the varying wants of business.
It is in this respect that our
system is most wanting, and the defects which we now
scarcely observe may perhaps become conspicuous when
we approach the resumption of
specie payments. But,
however this may be, we maintain that our currency sys¬
tem is fenced in with better safeguards than former sys'
terns established in this country, and that the destruction of
the old State Bank issues is not the least of its numerous
claims on the public regard.

and is emitted

GOLD EXPORTS,

711,

population has been diverted to mining; and
having so far diminished the relative production of other ex
portable products, we have had to pay for a portion of our
imports in the new product. Since 1850 we have exported
$670,000,000 more specie than we have imported; or, on an
average, $39,000,000 per annum. Or, to express the fact
differently, we have during that period paid for 15 per cent,
of our consumption of foreign products in gold.
During the last four years the exports of specie have ex¬
ceeded the imports at the average rate of $53,000,000 per
annum, the relative diminution of our exports of other products
having necessitated the falling back upon our accumulation
of the precious metals. There is, however, no apparent rea¬
son for
supposing that this large increase in the specie ex¬
ports has reduced the stock below the amount at which it
previously stood. It is difficult to ascertain precisely what
is the production of gold in the country for a given period,
and it is consequently impossible to say definitely what has
been the relation between the supply and the shipments.
The amount of gold and silver coined during the four years
1862-3-4-5 averaged $36,500,000 per year.
It appears,
however, from statistics in the last report on the finances,
that the amount coined in 1866 was only about 65 per cent,
of that upon which assay tax was paid; while it was proba¬
bly not more than half the actual production. These con¬
siderations would seem to warrant the conclusion that the
production, during this four years, was largely in excess of
the net exports, which, as above stated, averaged $53,000,000. According to the last report of the Director of the
Mint, the amount of gold assayed, upon which tax was col¬
lected, in 1866, was $81,000,000 valued in currency, or say
$57,000,000 in gold. The Director of the Mint estimates
that fully one-fourth of the product escapes taxation; from
which it would follow that the domestic supply last year
must have been about $75,000,000; which is within a mil¬
lion of the net exports for that period, a year of unprece¬
dentedly heavy shipments of gold.
It is not to be supposed that this year the yield of the mines
On the contrary, while Califor¬
will fall below that of 1866.
nia appears to be keeping up its wonted rate of supply, Colo¬
rado, Nevada and Idaho are largely increasing their produc¬
tion; so that the probability is that the yield of 1867 will
of

our

active

assign any rational explanation of the feel¬
ing of uneasiness, not to say alarm, with which our periodical
exports of the precious metals are regarded. During late
weeks the balance of our foreign exchanges has been watched
with a feeling bordering upon anxiety, to ascertain whether
we were likely to have to liquidate a portion of our foreign
.debts in specie ; and so soon as it became apparent that we
must ship a few millions of gold the premium advanced, and
coin was held with a tenacity which seemed to imply that
we had none to spare, and that its
loss was a financial ca¬
lamity.
We are not disposed to underrate the importance of keep¬
ing in the Treasury an amount of coin sufficient to bespeak
confidence in the ability of the Government to pay its gold
interest, and to encourage the public hope of the resumption
of specie payments within a reasonable period
nor do we
forget that the payment of over 150 millions per annum for
customs duties requires a certain supply of gold upon the
open market.
But beyond these purposes, what use have we
for our present large production of precious metals ?
When
affairs were upon a specie basis there might be just cause for
uneasiness, in the event of a certain exportation of gold large
exceed that of last year.
enough to impair the coin reserves of the banks; but now
What then can be more unreasonable than apprehensions
we have no such danger to fear; and any accumulation be¬
of an over export of specie?
We could send abroad nearly
yond what is required for the purposes of the Treasury, and
$1,500,000 per week the year round, without diminishing our
for the payment of customs duties is so much unproductive
stock; yet, judging from the movement since July last, the
capital. It is not available for commercial purposes, being net
exports for the current fiscal year are not likely to exceed
no
longer the medium of exchanges. It cannot be loaned, one half that rate. The misfortune, really, is not that there
because it cannot be used. It is virtually so much dead capis any danger of our gold being drained off to an injurious
ital, the country receiving no advantage from its existence.
extent, but that we are liable to make a large accumulation
Clearly, then, it is much better that any surplus we may
for which we have no use. It would be far better for our own'
have of this product should go out of the country in exchange
It is difficult to

people and for the countries with which we are in trading
products, which contribute to supplying the sub¬
intercourse, were a portion of our gold-mining population di¬
stantial wants of the people. It maybe very gratifying
verted to the production of commodities more essential to the
to a sort of miserly propensity to know that we have a large
comfort and sustentation of the populations. False monetary
stock of precious metals in the country; but it would be
much more conducive to the public welfare were it exchanged systems have encouraged the diversion of an immense amount
of labor from more useful pursuits to the production of gold ;
say for foreign wool to employ our manufacturers and clothe
and this may in part account for the fact that, ever since the
our
population, or were it used in the purchase of English
railroad iron for the increase of our means of transportation, gold discoveries of California and Australia, there has been a

for other

importation of any raw materials of our manufac¬
tures, or of any goods which can be produced more advan¬
tageously abroad than at home. By that means production
would be promoted, trade would be stimulated, and the gen¬
eral enjoyment of our people would be increased.
It is scarcely necessary to ask whether we have any real
surplus of gold. Ever since the discovery in California we
Lave been large exporters of specie. A considerable portion
or

for the




general dearness of products and
city of commodities and labor.

services, a comparative scar¬

AND ASHTABULA RAILROAD.
Occupying the centre of the Lake Shore Line of railroads,
and being the outlet for the Western markets generally, the
Cleveland, Painesville and Ashtabula Railroad may fairly be
considered as the northernmost stepping stone between the
CLEVELAND, PAINESYILLE

[June 8,186T.

THE CHRONICLE.

712

we

received the following amounts—

find that the latter have

the most import in cash
$2,004,815, in stock $1,630,000 and in bonds $400,ant works of the Union.
At Cleveland it receives the tiavel
000, or in all, foi the five years embraced, the sum of $4,634,and trade from Chicago, St. Louis and Cincinnati, and extend¬
815, nearly 155 per cent., or at the rate of 31 per cent, per
ing thence 06 miles to Erie, it is continued to Buffalo by the
annum, not including the current interest on the dividends
Buffalo and State Line Railroad, and from Buffalo by the
severally. The company are now paying 10 per cent, on their
Central route to the seaboard at New \ork and Boston. As
capital increased by these dividends to $5,000,000, which is
it is one of the most important of our railroads, so has it been
equivalent to 16 2-3 per cent, on the original investment.
of the most profitable to its stockholders, and hence its
Geographical position is the master-key to this grand result.
stock being held for investment, is seldom quoted in the mar¬
kets.
Its real value, however, will be best understood by a
PUBLIC DEBT OF THE UNITED STATES.
careful study of the figures which represent the company’s
and old States,

new

and

such,

as

one among

one

The amount of the gross

five years.

business for the last

earnings of this road of less
working expenses yearly have

than a hundred miles, and the
been as shown in the lollowing

from the bouks and Treas¬
urer’s returns in the Treasury Department, on the 1st of April,
the 1st of May and the 1st of June, 1867, comparatively :
Abstract statement, as appears

DEBT BEARING COIN INTEREST.

statement:

Freight.

Mails
Use of freight cars
Interest

1,069,323 88 954,538
1,125,502 72 1,468,445
21,600
21,600 00
19,610 01
20,524 94
20,526

....

Miscellaneous....

51,551,628

30

2,066,622

85 i2,424,29S 68

157,349 78

Repairs of mach’y.

96,965 96

U. S. & State taxesi

20,641 58

52,967

19

83

797,S37

96

Operat’g the road. 300,697
:$575,704
$975,923

Net Earnings..

51

47

1,268,784

The amount of interest

bursements, in each

279,755

.

“

“

Miscellaneous
Construction and 1

44

44

14

952,041

and dividends paid and other dis

( 141,174 17

35,375 59
*

81,455 67

79,306 01

155,035 37

company

the

at the close

of each of the last five

years

1862.
31

1864. \
32
21

1865
26

1866.
37
24

8
891

32
S71
110

8
10
890
117

Locomotive engines.

21

13
8
535

second class

“

„

Baggage, mail and express cars
Coal

cars

••

♦*

or

the

1863.
31
21
8
8
801

the

same

years are

36

3-year Compound Interest
3-year 7.30 notes

1862.

1863.

1SG4.

1865.

202,904

257,812
301,149
13,955

12,925

134,530
237,278

137,409

245,662

253,479

391,670

299,360
501,092

Through freight (tons of 2,000
423,766
lbs.) carried

544,842

606,964

482,723

590,033

657,817

41

by coal trains

Through passengers carried.
Total

freight (tons of 2,000

Total

lbs.) carried

The

456,066

346,567

1S66.
261,928

298,124
23,010
360,735

593,748

597,306

5S9,210

freight carried on the road was classified as follows

:

Iron

tons.
(bituminous)
(pig, castings, &c.) and
tons.

ores

Railroad iron
Petroleum & other oils.

7,480
1,785

1863.
656

9,024
3,969

1864.

1865.

1866.

3,744

47,169

107,750

11,142
3,753

it

19,184

4^327

117,534
111,651
54,798
118,921

589,210

144,i23
148,397

7,732
141,649

95,826

69,407
149,907
9,4 J3
98,264

183,313

119,506
121,154
67,411
107,525
17,653
9M07

of 2,000 lbs.).. 456,066

590,033

657,S17

597,306

“
“

“
“

44

55,120
84,362
85,-74

119,506
5,431

13,964

948

6,177

78,740

Merchandise
Manufactures
Live stock
Lumber
Other articles

“

32,411

6,970

180,643

Agricultural products..

Total (tons

“

1862.
726

11,716

27,304

following shows the amount of stock and indebtedness
the cost of road and equipment yearly :
1862.

1863.

1864.

1865.

1866.

Capital Stock. $3,300,000 00 $3,600,000 00 $4,000,000 00 $5,000,000 00 $5,COO,000 CO
Funded Debt. 1,500,000 00 1,503,000 00 1,601,000 00 1,600,000 00 1,500,000 00
$4,800,000 00 $5,103,00000$5,501,000 00 $6,500,000 00 $^500^)000
$3,452,143 86 $8,566,896 16 $3,766,159 88 $8,802,783 68 $8,882,089 64
733,202 15
Equipment...
590,344 28
937,686 15
986,337 49
986,387 49
Total

Railroad..

Total

..

$4,043,487 59 $4,305,098 81 $4,703,845 63 $4,789,12112 $4,868,427 13

Assuming the stock of this company at $3,000,000 as at
period above reviewed and taking*
the amounts divided to the stockholders through that period,1

the commencement of the




$13,722,000
130,030,240
511,939,525

$697,115,710

$645,691,765

CEASED.

$11,932,540

$9,713,020

DEBT BEARING NO INTEREST.

$375,417,249

United States Notes
Fractional currency
Gold certilicates of deposit

$374,247,687 $373,209,737

29,217,495
12,590,000

28,975,379
15,400,410

28,458,075
17,323,980

$417,225,344

$418 623,506

$418,991,792

Aggregate debt
Coin and Currency in Treasury

$2,663,713,374 $2,668,875,099 $2,687,010^520
140,285,304
118,098,002
171,424,583

Debt, less coin and currency

$2,523,428,070 $2,520,786,096 $2,515,615,937

The
rency

following statement shows the amount of coin and cur¬
separately at the dates in the foregoing table:

Gold Coin

April 1.
$105,956,477

Mayl.
$114,250,444

Junel.
$98,758,418

34,328,827

33,838,558

72,666,165

Currency
Total

$140,285,304

gold coin and currency

Catest filoiutarj)

$148,089,002 $171,424,583

anil Commercial Cnglisf) JJno*,

RATES OF EXCHANGE AT LONDON, AND
AT LATEST DATES.

EXCHANGE AT LONDON—

ON LONDON

EXCHANGE ON LONDON.

MAY 24.

LAIKST

Amsterdam...

Antwerp

Hamburg

RATE.

time.

short.
1118 @11.18%
3 months, 25.40 @25.45
13. 9%@13. 0%

25.37%@25.45
Paris
short.
25.17%@25.25
Paris
3 months. 13. 0 @13. 5
Vienna
4i
6.26 @ 6.2 ■%
Berlin
44
31W> 31*
St. Petersburg

44

it

New York....
Jamaica
Havana
Rio de Janeiro
Bncuos Ayres.

—

—

—

—

May 24.

RATE.

TIME.

short.

44

44

44

44

11.92%

44
44

2*.22%@

-

13. 7%@

-

25.17%

3 mo’s.

25.22

—

—

—

—

—

—

May 24.

3 mo’s.

31%

May 20.

30

53

days.

_

—

—

—

—

—

May 22 60 days.
109%
April 24. 90 days.
par.
April 29. 60 days. 9@10 p. c. prem.
23%@24%
April 24.
tt
49% © April 14.
47 @47%
April 13.
May 1.
23%@ April 22. 6 11108. 4a. 5%d.@ —
4a. 4d. © —
April 15.
44
4% p. c. dis.
April 30.
44
la. 11 7-16d.
Mav 21.
la. 11 %d.
May 1!).
,44
la. !l%d.
May 20.
April 27. 30 days. 1% p. c. prem.
it

—

—

—

—

44

-

—

-

-

iw

Pernambuco..

—

—

_

60

44

% p. c. dis.
lalld
la lid
lalld

44

44

30

4a. 4d.
4a. 4d.

days.
.44

Madras
Calcutta

Sydney

—

—

Valparaiso....
Singapore
Hong Kong...
Ceylon
Bombay

DATE.

49

©49)*
90 days.
52%© 52%
3 months. 27.26 ©27.30
27.20 ©27.30
27.20 @27.30

Lisbon
Milan
Genoa

days.

1 p. c.

TFrom

dis.

tt

44

ourown Correspondent..!

London, Saturday, May 25,1867.

The

and

$12,922,000
1 34,774,510
549,419,200

$12,285,658

Various bonds and notes...

Naples

'

Coal

Notes

$734,280,780

44

385,137

INTEREST.

$12,922,000
139,028,630
582,330,150

shown in

231,820
360,379
15,390

pass’ger trains. 201,380
by freight trains.. 282,917

12,500,000

DEBT ON WHICH INTEREST HAS

following table :
“

12,500,000

1,031,146,150 1,092,640,600

.12,500,000

i

cent, bonds

ON—

Miles run by

15,325,642
283,740,350

DEBT BEARING CURRENCY

6 per

consisted of

following:

15,379,642

2S3,746,200

$1,499,381,592 $1,541,203,342 $1,602,643,942

The

engines and cars owned and operated by the

15,482,642

2S3,745,000
989,562,U00

5.20's

Navy Pension Fund

38

00 $1<’5,000 00 $105,000 00 $105,000 00 $105,000 00
00 429,000 00 975,815 00 400,000 00 500,000 00
.........
00 330,000 00
608,185 17
00
*.
112,700 00
(

)

The stock of

of 1867 and 1S68....
of 1881

152,571 35

surplus of this and former year* was distributed in stock to the stock¬
holders to the amount of $1,000,000, being a 25 per cent, dividend.
*

44

$19S,091,350 $198,431,350 $198,431,350

521.196 02

06

1,148,561

[ 180,994 83 ^ 263,610 72 398,747 22

equipment

687,243 26
255,781 92

860,280 79 1,210,661 so:1,616,793 45

89 ]1,564,017 89

“

of the above years, was as follows:

$94,710
Dividends in cash
300,000
instock. 300,000
in bonds. 400,000
Interest

Surplus

86 : 2,568,834 83

378,166 49
141,578 83
544,881 64
146,034 84

46
105,225 21
387,325 81
87,974 31

258,413 13
159, S70 29
326,587 33

:

2,359,222

08
99
00
59

bonds

12,686 70
91,037 49

25,715 75
97,470 50

30,433 45
233,491 30

24.876 34
69,973 17

15,768 29
41,057 86

$

$

$
$
$
408,141 49 602,691 13 834,254 85
1,065,060 66 1,347,482 21 1,283,994 14
21,600 00
21,600 00
21,600 00

Passengers

5 per cent,
44

June 1.

Mayl.

April 1.

1866.

1865.

1864.

1863.

1862.

prominent feature of interest
during the week is the arrival of large supplies of gold from the United
States, together with the announcement ^that further considerable im¬
portations may be expected in the course of next week. This circum¬
stance, combined with the fact that about £300,COO has been received
from Australia, while about £500,000 is still afloat from thence, has
beeu productive of increased ease in the money market. The demand
for accommodation during the present week has been very moderate.
Although several failures have transpired, the banks and discount
offices have shown a fair disposition to lend, and the best descriptions
of paper have, in numerous cases, been taken at *a redaction of } per
In

a

monetary point of view, the most

June

8,1867.]

THE CHRONICLE.

713

*

compared with the minimum quotation of the Bank of Eng¬ In the memorial presented by the deputation they gave the following
land. As trade has now been slack for so long a period, and as no statement of the imports of cotton from India for each of the five
years
foreign loans of importance are likely to be introduced into our mar¬ immediately preceding the American war, and during the subsequent
ket, an active or stringent money market is not likely to be produced ; five years, with their money value:
and this may be considered the more probable, when we bear in mind
FIVE YEARS BEFORE THE WAR BEGAN.
that a rapid accumulation of gold is now taking place both in the Banks
Imports.
Official
I
Official
Imports.
Bales.
value.
| Year.
Bales.
valufe.
of England and France.
The last Bank of England return shows an Year,
1856.
463,000
£3 572,329 I 1859
510,700
3,938,995
increase in the supply of bullion of nearly £500,000, while in the Bank 1857
680,500
5,453,426 11860
563,200
3,373,614
1858
361,OuO
2,970,518 j
of France, notwithstanding the large supply previously held there,
showed an augmentation of nearly £800,000. Here the stock of bullion Amounting in the aggregate to the sum of £19,131,882, and aver¬
is £19,664,000, while in the Bank of France the total is now as high as aging £3,862,776 yearly.
cent., as

.

...

.

,

.

£32,768,380, so that, in the two establishments, the supply of bullion
amounts to £52,427,380.
So far a3 the Bank of England is concerned,
there is every prospect that a further large increase may be anticipa¬
ted. Since the last bank return was made up, the sums of foreign gold
sent into the establishment have amounted to £117,000.
The supply
on the market is very large, and as there is no export demand, nearly
the whole will be sent into the Bank. The next Bauk statement will

varying probably from £600,000 to £1,000,000, and.
as further large shipments of specie are on their way from New York,
the accumulation at the Bank of England is likely to exteud beyoDd
the present week. So far as the best descriptions of paper are con¬
cerned, the rates of discount here, are as under :
show an increase

Per Cent.

Per Cent4 months’ bank bills

3

Bank minimum...

2#@3

| 6 months’ bank bills
2#@2# I 4 & 0 months’ trade bills

Open market rates
80 to 60 days’ bills
8 mouths’ bills

2#@2#

|

3

@3#

3

@4

Very little change has taken place in the rates on the Continent dur¬
ing the week. At the principal cities the demand has been decidedly
quiet. The quotations at this date, and in 1866 are subjoined :
>—B’k rate1866. 1867.
At Paris
Vienna

...

4

3

5

4
4
2#
3

Berlin
9
Frankfort. 7
Amst’ra’m 6#

—Op. m’kt—>
1866.
4

2#

0
»
7

4

6#

r—B’k rate—>
1866. 1S67.

1867.

3#
1X-2

2#

Turin
Brussels
Madrid

..

...

Hamburg.
=

St.

•

8
6
nom.
-

PetVg. 5#

5
3
5
—

7

1S66.
noui

-5

2#-2#

nom.

-—

7# 3#-2#
6#-7
7#-8#

weather would be hailed with satisfaction, for the frosts which

prevailed during the present week are calculated to do much in¬
jury should they continue. In the wheat trade there has been rather
have

firmness, but as millers are operating with their accustomed

cau¬

activity in the demand, and hence sales progress slowly.
provincial markets the quotations are the turn higher

tion, there is no
In

some

of the

is by no means general.
Liverpool this week, a fair amount of business has been
transacted, but holders have freely met the market, and hence the quo¬
tations have given way. In many instances the decline in prices
imounted to }d. per lb. The total sales of the week are 69,510 bales
of which 1,880 are a speculation, 19,640 bales for export, and 47,999
balsa to the trade. At Manchester there is no improvement* On the
other hand, but chiefly as regards certain descriptions of cloth, suitable
for the Indian markets, the downward movement in the quotations has
made further progress. In other parts of the manufacturing districts
great quietness prevails, the business doing beiQg of quite a hand to
mouth character. The public sales of colonial wool which are now in
progress in London are, however, progressing more satisfactorily, and,
in some descriptions of wool, the quotations are rather higher than at
the commencement of the series, but are nevertheless }d. to l}d. per lb.
lower than at the cl^se of the previous auctions. The supply to be
brought forward being so very lcrge, it has been arranged to withdraw
abont 25,000 bales, and to offer that supply at the next series of sales.
This is undoubtedly one reason why the sales are more spirited ; but
the chief cause appears to be a return of confidence in most parts of the
but such a movement
In cotton, at

country.
As

and

cn

a

previous occasions, when matters appeared to be mending,
healthy trade was anticipated, the tendency to improve¬

return of

ment has received

The

a

Bales.
986,600

1,072,439 v

22,042,437
34,700,661

1,223,700

degree of interest in

FIVE

YEARS.

Imports.

Year,

Official
value.

Bales.

18*4.

1,399,500
1,266,520

1865.

38,214,723
25.005,856

Being in the aggregate £129,423,233, or, upon the average, £25,884,646 annually.
The imports for the year 1866, just closed, amount to
1,847,770 bales, the estimated value of which is upwards of 33,000,000
sterling.
The imports of specie into the United
Kingdom during the week have
amounted to £758,000, viz.: £71,500 by
the City of Washington
£12,500 by the Cuba, £277,800 by the City of Paris, £26,500 by the
,;Malta, £4,800 by the America, and £11,000 by the Teutonia, all from
New York ; £6,400 by the Celt from the Cape of Good
Hope, £15,500
by the Damascus from Sydney, £14,500 by the Alexandria from New
Zealand ; £158,100 by the Kent, and £160,000
by the Superb from
Australia. There is no export demand for gold, and the silver market
is very flat at a further decline in the quotations. The
principal demand
is for the Continent, but for this purpose it is beneath the
average. The
prices current for bullion are now as under :
GOLD.

Bar Gold
Fine
do
Refinable
do

...peroz. standard.
do
last
do

Spanish Doubloons

South American Doubloons...
United States Gold Coin

price

peroz.
do
do

s.

d.

77
77
77
75

9
9

d.

s.

@-

@—

10# @—
6
@76
9
@—

“"73
76

0

2# @~

SILVER.

d.
s.
0 # ©# @—

s.

Bar Silver
do
containing 5 grs.
Fine Cake Silver
Mexican Dollars

Quicksilver, £6 17s.

per

standard.
do

per oz.

gold

5
5
5
4

per oz.
per oz.

bottle

discount 8

;

d.

5* @—
@—

11

per cent.

The

large importations of bullion, the rapid accumulation cf gold at
England, the prospect of a speedy reduction in the Bank
and the hesitation still shown by the public in investing in the

the Bank of
rate,

K

public companies have produced more firmness in the consol
advance has taken place in the quotations. Nu¬
merous bona fide investments have been made, and prices have risen
about one-half per cent. Consols are now much higher than for several
years past, and so long as m may continues so cheap, and so long as the
public fear to purchase the shares of public companies, so long will the
consol market continue in its present firm state.
At this period last
year consols were at only 86f, the Bank rate was ten per cent.; and
the advances made by the directors had reached the heavy total of
£31,000,000, while the reserve of notes aud coin had fallen to £1,388,At the present time, the position of the Bank is very different.
216.
The following statement shows to what extent changes have taken place
since this period last year, and as the comparsion is extended to the
preceeding three years, a comparative view is afforded of the state of
the resources of the Bank of England at this date since 1863 :
shares of

market, and a rapid

Other deposits
Gov. securit’s
Other do
Reserve
Coin & bullion
Bank rate....
Consols

13,842,718
11,151,39V
20,153,795
8.776,279

....

Av. pr

14,500,019

13,551,860

10.785,267
20,414,915
7,947,133
13,713,943

10,984,441
19,719,276
9,087,353
15,299.268

2s.
a

3#d.

statement

1S66.

1867.

£26,020,693

£22,771,450

5,994,761

18,796,917

8,5.34,864
17,185,452

10,837,056

12,886,314

31,050,406
1,38",216
11,357,786

19,122 322

3

90#

39s. «d.
28d.

41s. «d.

4«s. Id.

15#d.

12d.

Is.

28. 9d.

10,761,515
19,664,068

10

91#

8#d.

86#

91#-#
64s. lid.

lid.

Is. 6d.

Is. 5d

showing the highest and lowest prices ef

day during the week

ending May 25 Monday.

7.997,l"5

4

7

32d.

Annexed is

Week

£21,330,490

4

wheat.

consols each

£20,868,047
7,971,003
12,882,042

92#
46«. 8d.

Mid Up. cot’n
40 mule yarn,
fair 2d qual.

1S65.

1864.

1S63.

Circulation... ;£20,909,819
Public depos’
S,002.346

check from the announcement of several failures.

one, however,^vhich possesses any
America is that of Messrs. Frazer, Trenholme &

only

NEXT

1867.

little of importance can be noticed this
week. Since Monday last cold easterly winds have prevailed, but as
yet no signs of blight are spoken of, and the agricultural prospect may
still be considered satisfactory. The wheat plant is evidently healthy
and vigorous ; but at the same time, a return and a continuance of fine

more

Year.
1861..
1562..
1863..

THE

Official
value.
£9.459.556

-Op. m’kt->

In reference to the crops, very

summer

DURING

Imports.

:

Tuesday.

Wed’y.

@93# 92#@93#

Thur.

Friday.
93

Sat.

93*@93i
money... 92# @93#
Oo., of Liverpool, the
financial agents of the late Southern Confederacy. Their losses in con¬
Taken as a whole the market for American securities has been flat.
nection with their position of financial agents, and also in connection At one period of the week, Five twenty bonds were decidedly weak,
with litigation with the United States Government, combined with the and business was doBe in them as low as 7If. The market, however^
recent fall in the price of cotton, have been the chief causes of their closes with a firmer appearance.
Erie Railway shares are very fiat •
Illinois
but
Centrals
have
been
present difficulties. Their liabilities are said to be about £1,000,000.
'tolerably firm. United States FiveA deputation from the Cotton Supply Association waited upon the Twenty bonds close to day at 72} to 72} ; Erie Railway Shares 39 to
Secretary of State for India to represent the importance of appointing 40; Illinois Centrals 75} to 76}; Atlantic and Great Western Con¬
additional cotton commissioners in certain specified districts of India. solidated mortgage bonds, 21 to 22 ; Atlantic and Great Western D#-




Consols for

93

@«3f 93*@93f

bentures 28 to 80

The

The subjoined statement shows the
each day of the week :

coupon.

ex

highest and lowest prices on

|<2%-72%

U. 8. 6-20’s
Atlantic & G’t Westeru comroPd bonds 21%-...
Erie Shares ($100)
42%-....
Illinois shares ($100) 76%-76%

-....

42% 42%-.... 41
76%-...
76%-76% ■6%-77

give the following as the quo¬

The latest advices from the continent

Twenty bonds

tations of United States Five

show

22
21%-22
39%-....
39%-40
76%-76% 75%-76%

21%-22

22

and Exports for the Week.—The imports this week
considerable gain in both dry goods and general merchan¬
dise, the total being $5,950,715, against $4,291,490 last week, and
$3,933,315 the previous week. The exports are $2,437,899 this week,

Imports

71%-72% 72%-72%

72%-72% 72%-72% 71%-72
21%-22

.

COMMERCIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS NEWS.

Friday. Sat’rday.

ending May 26.Monday. I'm-sday. Wed’day Thu’day

Amsterdam, 75

:

Frank¬

;

only change in the London market is the advance of Sugar

to 258.

SECURITIES.

OF PRINCIPAL AMERICAN

HIGHEST AND LOWEST PRICES

Week

fort, 77 9 lfi; Berlin, 78£ and Hamburg, 70|.
English Market Reports—Per Cable.

a

against $1,815,222 last week, and $3,982,664 the previous week. The
exports of cotton the past week were 6,765 bales, against 3,490
bales last week. The following are the imports at New York for week
ending (for dry goods) May 31, and for :ue week ending (for general
merchaniise) June 1

Money Market.—Consols and U. S. 6’s have been steady
throughout the week, but both are a fraction below the maximum. » Il¬
linois Central shares have advanced
points. Erie, whfch on Tues¬
day advanced to 4Of, is again below the
95%

Consols for money
U S. 6’s (1862)
I1U ois Central shares..
Erij Railway shares....

76%
40

Thn. 6.

*91%

*94%

73

73

73

78%
40%

78%
40%

78%

39%

40

6’s at Frankfort have been rs fol¬

77 %

77%

Liven ool Cotton Market.—The
30 amounted to 82,000

77%

77%

77%

77%

bales, including 27,000 bales on speculation

and

stock

It will ,be seen that
improvement in price has been exhibited, but at the close there is a
slight falling off :

have been

as

Mon., 3.

Tnes., 4.

20,000

Sat., 1.
20,< 00

20,000

12,000

Uplds.

ll%d.

ll%d.

ll%d.@%

ll%d.

Orleans

ll%d.

ll%d.

ll%d.

Bales sold
Price Miad.
“

“

Wed.,5. Thu., 6.
10,000
8,000

li%d.

ll%d.

ll%d.

ll%d.

ll%d.

Liverpool Breadstuff's Market.—Breadstuffs have been dull through¬
out the week, and close generally at a decline.
California Wheat is 3d.
lower. Corn is Is. 6d. lower, and Peas 6d. lower. Milwaukee Wheat,
Barley and Oats are unchanged :
Fri

31.
d.
13 9
.

8.

(Mil. red No. 1) p. ctl
(Califor. white) “
Corn (West, mx’d) p. 4801bs
Barley( American) per 00 lbs
O ita (Am «fc Can.) per 45 lbs
Wheat
“

0
3
8
6
0

14
39
4

3
40
29

Peas.. .(Canadian) per qtr.
Flour (West’n Cun’l) p. bbl

0

Sat. 2. Mon .3.
s. d.
s. d.
13 9
13 9
14
0
14 0
39 0
39 3
4
4
8
8
3 6
3 6
40 0
40 0
29 0
21 0

-

Tub .4.
s. d.
13 9
13 9
3S 0
4
8
3 6
39 6

Wed1.5.
s. d.
13
13
38
4
3

39

Thu.6.
8. d.
13 9

9

9
0
8

13
37
4
3
39

6

6

9
9
8
6
6

Beef (ex. pr. mess) p. 304 lbs
Pork(Etn. pr. mess) p 200 lbs
Bacon (Climb, cm) p. 112 lbs
Lard (American)
“
“
Cheese (tine Am.) “
“

132
82
39
49
07

6
6
0
6
0

Sat. 1.
s. d.
132 6
82 6
40 0
49 6
67 0

40

0

49
67

6
0

Tues
8.

132
80
40
49

67

4.
d.
6
0
0
6
0
.

Wed. 5.
s. d.
132 6
79 0
40 0
49 6
66 0

Thu 6.
s. d.
132 6
79 0
40 0
49 6
66 0

Liverpool Produce Markets.—Nearly the whole list shows a decline
only clover seed is without change.
Dulness have equalized the

and

week’s business.

The advance in tallow is
Fri. 31.
s.

31

Ashes—pots
per 112 lbs
Rosin (com SVilm).
“
(tine) .
“
Sp turpentine
“
Petroleum (std white).p. S lbs
spirits
per 8 lbs
Tallow (American) .p 112 lbs.
Clover seed (Am. red)
“

7

13
34
1
0
43
42

*•

“

London Produce and Metal
the week, and linseed
out

cbaDge.

oil £1.

Sat. 1.

d.
6
6
0
0
3
11
9
0

8.

31
7
13

(1.
6
6
0
6
3
11

34
1
0
44 0<
42 0

more

than lost

Mon 3.
s. d.
31 6
7 0
13

0

33

0

Til,.4.
8. l 1.
31 6
7 0
12 6
33 0
1 2
0:to
41 0
42 0

1 2
0 10
44 0
42 0

Tu 4 Wd. 5.
3
0

cake
oil

Sperm oil
Whale oil

The

(obl’g)...

“
“

24 3 24 3
24 3
24
04 0 04 0
04 0
04
£9 15 0 £9 15 0 £9 15 £9 15

40

“
(Icel’d).per252 gal.

0

40

0

40 10

*..

24
04

9

0

Th .6
8. d.
31 0
7 0
12 0
33 0
1

1

0 104
43 6
42 0

Th. 6.
24 9
04 0

£915

£9 15
41 00

40 10

Iron (Sc. pig mxd num) p. ton.
Tin (Straits & Banca) p.112 lbs

53 6

53 6
85 6

54 0
85 6

103,655,187

$133,907,962

$109,605,902

41 00

$5,950,715'

1865.

1866.

For the week

$3,387,911

$1,725,342

$1,634,555

$2,437,899

Previously reported....

66,047,942

69.375,039

96,519,858

80,958,842

Since Jan. 1

$69,435,853

$71,100,381

$98,154,413

1864.

The value of
of

1867.

$83^91^741

exports from this port to different countries (exclusive

specie) for the past week, and since January 1, is shown in the fol¬

lowing table:
To
Great Britain...
France

63.268

Germany
...
Other N.Europe
Other S.

Europe

Hayti

5,675,541
2,090,319

143,182
350,869
24,900
50,757
251,586

Other W. I
Mexico
New Granada...
Venezuela
Br. Guiana
Brazil
Others. A. ports
All other ports.
....

9,316,128
588,945

613,84 >
1,940,656

East Indies

China &

The

8'r0,S29
1,003,131
1,046,050

5,310

Japan

Australia
Br.N A Colonies

‘s’soi

Since

week.

To
Cuba

$1,129,886 $47,672,812

Holland & Belg.

Spain

This

Since
Jan. 1,1867

This
week.

Jan. 1.

$59,082
39,675
87,189

$2,610,336
483 497

3.031,202
763,473
1,365,732
316,691
540,082
1,212,515
1,423,710.
652,458

90,87i
10,849
47,298
21,103
45.818

39,505

following will show the exports of specie from the port of New
ending June 1, 1867 :

York for the week

Gold bars

May 27—Brig Eaglet, Mayaguez —
American silver.
29—St. Java, Liverpool—
American gold
Go d bars

“

“

$5,000

80,5 0

31—Si. Germania, Ham¬

gold...
.

3,000
79,0-39

Gold and si!v -rbars
30—St. Morro Castle,
Havana—
American gold
American silver....
American gold.5....

20,000
50,009

50,000

.

burg—
Foreign silver
Foreign silver
31—St. Pennsylvania,

50,500

30—St. Hansa, Bremen-

Foreign silver

$117,700

Foreign silver
American gold
Am rican

...

,

3.000
5,000

Liverpool—
An erlcan gold
31—St. City of Baltimore,

Liverpool—

„

American silver....

1,184

105,000

Total for the week

$777,6^3

.....

Previously reported
Total since Jan.

1, 1867

Same time in
1S66
1865
1864
1863
1862
1861...,
1869
1859

The

16,478,145
$17,255,788
Same time
1858

...$33,236,779
13,436,982

in

$11,785,217

1857
1856

23,707,158
19,264,193
18,108.787
3,005,196

..

1855
1854

1853
1852

14,360,832

14,626,715
10,968,982
13.662,686
12,944,928

6,737,724
10.188,824

*.

27,884,544

imports of upecie at this port during the week have been as

follows:

;

*

May 30—Steamer Eagle, HavanaGold
;

$500

$1,056,073

Previously reported

....$1,056,573

January 1, 1867

steamship Henry Chauncey, from
Aspinwall May 24, arrived at this port June 2, with treasure to the
Treasure

from

California.—The

following consignees:
FROM SAN FRANCISCO.

:

54 0

54 0

$102,315
140,459
284,359
25,000

$28,050 I Wells, Eargo & Co
92,600 | Dabney, Morgan &Co
95,000 I Lees & Waller....
6,530 | Order

Eugene Kelley & Co

First National Bank

$774,313

Total from San Francisco

Latest:

Consols closed this

Friday Evening.

FROM

U. S. 6’s (5-20’s) at 73 ; Illinois
Railway shares at 39f.
.The sales of Cotton at Liverpool to-day amounted to 10,000 bales.
The closing prices were—Uplands Ilf 1. and New Orleans llfd.
Ad¬
vices from Manchester^are not favorable.
Breadstuffs are quiet and prices generally without change. Corn is
evening at 94

;

Central shares at 78f, and Erie

3d. lower.




Lard closed at 60s. and Pork at 79s,

200,000

...

5,020
2,700

May 31—St. Europe, Havre—

Panama R.R. Co.
J. & W. Selieman

54 0

$61,146,299

4,718,148

our

„

.....

following quotations for metals are reported

$7,709,323
126,1:8,639

.,$104,650,503

Total since

Mon. 3.

Sugar (No.12 Dch std) p. 112 lbs.
(Calcutta).
“
“

Wed. 5.
8. d.
31 6
7 0
12 0
33 0
1 2
0 10
43 9
42 0

Iron has advanced 6d.

Linseed
“

:

Markets—Sugai’9 have advanced 6d. on
Linseed and cake are steady and w ith.

Fri. 31. Sat. 1.

$2,852,205
58,294,034

99,082,670

..

.

Mon 3.
s. d.
132 6
80 0

$5,507,838

1SG7.

$1,232,507

EXPORTS FROM NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK.

“

Liverpool Provisions Market.—Pork has declined 8s. 6d. on the
week aud Cheese Is. Bacon is Is. higher.
Beef and Lard are without
change. The market generally has been without animation :
Fri. 31.
s. d.

1866.

$2,278,930
5,490,393

report of the dry-goods trade will be found the imports of dry
goods for one week later.
The following is a statement of the exports (exclusive of specie) from
the port of New York to foreign ports, for the week ending June 4 :
In

shown ir the following statement.

an

Fri., 31.

1865.

$897,385
1,954,880

Total for the week..
Previously reported ....

total sales for the week ending May

on hand at 811,000 (Amer. 444,000) bales.
The sales of the current week and the course of quotations (closing)

export, leaving the

ior

1864.

$\252,227
4,315,611

General merchandise...

Since Jan. 1.

73
79

:

Frank! ut

Drygoods

..

Tues.4. Wed. 5.

*94%

*■94%

73%
78%
40%

closing prices daily for U. S.

le

lows

73

opening quotation :

Mon. 3.

Sat. 1.
9C

Fri. 31.

:

FOREIGN IMPORTS AT NEW YORK FOR THE WEEK,

London

T

[June 8,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

714

Produce is

quiet.

Fchepeler. & Co...

Gen. E. Huerta
Total from Manzanillo

MANZANILLO.

$58,500

$144.&'0 I Frederick Probst & Co
3,6j0

|

‘.TT

$206,400

FROM ASPJNWALL.

$1,652

J. G. Davis & Co

Wells, Fargo & Co.....■

S. L. Isaacs & Asch
Total from Aspinwall

Total from all three

ports....

610
700

L. E. Aineinck & Co
Ribon & Munos
Solomon Lazarus & Son

,

:

589

600

...

A

$550

• ••• •

$^*31
$985,144

186?.]

June 8,

THE CHRONICLE.

arrivals of treasure from San Francisco since the

The

ment of the year, are

The amount of Government, State and
City and other bonds sold at the
Regular Board, daily and for the week, are given in the following statement:

commence

shown in the following statement:

Sat.

Since

Since

Steamship. At date. Jan. 1.
April 1 H. Channcey 891,992 7,001,853
14.Ocean Queen 1,142,884 8,144,737
“
22.New York... 1,114,778 9,259,515
788,027 3,260,922 May 2.H. Chauncey. 206,214 9,405,729
952,082 4,213 004 May 11. Arizona
409,6(57 9,875,396
818,818 5,031,822 May 2o.Ocean Queen 565,24710,440,643
244,888 5,276,710 June 2.11. Chauncey. 774,31311,214,956
833,151 6,109,861

Feb.10.Ocean Queen
Feb.22.Rsng atjtr
Mar. 4 H. Channcey.
13.Ocean Queen
Mar.24.Rising Star..
.

7,181
32,773

...

1748

...

1774
17+2
1790
1800....
1S10

....

59,707

...

52,317
68,825
69,122

...

...

....

1,446
3,452
4,321
4,310

...

6,380
7,614

77,031

....

Date.
1820....
1830

.10,071

....

1840
1S50
1860
!SG5

....

.

..

..

the State.

14.16
17 32
21.29

11,767

97,210

....

1(5,836
23,172
41,513
50,666
51,595

1OS,830
147,545
174,620.

.

..

....

....

....

....

27,0C0

57,f>00

15,00 •

5,000

10,000

1,000

15,000
6,000

Thur.

Week.

Fri.

23,100
....

130,600

21,000
5,000

1,000

26,000

30,000

25,000

63,500

4,000

19,000
6,000
1,000
136,000
25,000
10,000
518,000

....

1.0(H)

.

Missouri 6’s
N. Carolina 6’s.
Rhode IsEdO’s.
Tennessee 6’s..

21,060

Virginia 6s....

7.000

...

Prov.

Wed.

$70,000 $46,000 $48,000 $320,009
301,150 414,5(H) 325,000 2,695,050
1,000

2,00)

.

Pop. of Pop. of

Tnes.

Bonds, viz.:

Connecticut 6’s
•-eorgia 6’s
Michigan 7’s

Per

20.13
10.53
7.23
8.23
9.27
11.01
13.07

2,500

State

following shows the population of
the State, the population of Providence, and the percentage of the
whole population that was living in Providence, at different dates :
Date.
1703

C. S 7-30 notes.

Mon.

$84,000 $22,000
548,500 796,400

309.500
1.0(H)

..

Census of Rhode Island.—The

Pop. of Pop. of centage
the Stale. Prov. iu Prbv,

$50,000

...

“

Per

u. S. 6’s, 1881
U.S 6’s (5-20’s).
U.S 6’s (old)
U.S. 5’s (10-408)
U.S 5’s (old)
.

Date.

Date.
Steamship. At date. Jan. 1.
Jan. 10.Rising Star. $874,764 $874,764
“
20.New York.. 525,956 1,400,72U
Jan. 31.H. Chauncey 1,072,17 > 2,472,8^5

715

44,000

30,000

4,000

9,000

L000

148,000

96,000

23,000

3,000

38,000
8,000

10,000

62.0(H)

166,000

12,000

—

City Bonds, viz:
Brooklyn 6’s...
3,000
Company Bonds, viz :

4,09)

Railroad

46,500

25,000

iy,ooo

19,000

....

....

28.13
29.01
29.51

23,000

....

23,000

14,000

3,000

10,000

30,500

158,000

Friday, June 7,1867, P. M.

The Money Market.—The week

opened with a decidedly firm
tendency
in
the
has steadily gained strength
which
money
market,
Times of yesterday published an interesting table showing the debts of
the
The
showed
a decrease of $3,287,up
to
close.
Bank
statement
the several counties, towns and cities of the State of New York.
We
202 in deposits, and a loss of $2,102,613 in legal tenders ; and this
presume the figures, although not quite complete as yet, are official,
the out-towns Leing obtained by the State authorities under the direc¬ unfavorable tendency lias probably been still further extended dur¬
tion of the Legislature. The totals, as the 'Times gives them, are as
ing the week. On Monday, the balance in the Sub-Treasury was
follows :
was $123,700,000, and on
Thursday $131,000,000, showing an in¬
Total State debt....
$51,753,032 22
Total cities, conn tie s, &c
85,675,645 67 crease of over $7,000,000, and representing so much drawn from
Total State, county, city, &c._
$137,428,727 89 the banks. The Sub-Treasury statement of this evening is obviously
Debt

New York State, City

of

County.—The New York

and

This gives a total State and town debt of $187,428,'727 89, which the
missing returns will very likely swell to at least $140,000,000, or about
$35 each for every inhabitant in the State.

erroneuus

(Piiila.) Railroad.—This road is now open to
Philadelphia and Tren¬
the Pennsylvania, and the Philadelphia, Wilmington and Bal¬

ton,

It is the connecting link between

It is leased to the first named company at 6 per
The length of the road is about 7 miles.

timore Railroads.
cent, on it3 cost.

Bankers’

^a?ette.

DIVIDENDS,
The

following Dividends have b

declared during the past week:

en

C’T.

F.

most hazardous to the financial interests of

FAYA.BLE.

tin

name of company.

BOOKS

when.':

Bailro»ds:
Northern New Hampshire
Little Miami

3

May 28.

Philadelphia.

$4

June 16.
June 20.

Boston.
Cincinnati.

BUSINESS

4

AT

TliE

STOCK

branch of business, and the
consequently limited requirements for loans. As it is, the opera¬
tion lias produced a most decided stringency in the money market;
which has been more marked to day than on any previous day of
the week. We know ot one instance, this afternoon, in which a
banker of high standing called upon six leading banks for a loan
upon Government securities, willing to pay 7 per cent., and could
not procure a dollar.
To day large transactions in stocks have
been made,, and when the loans for taking them up have to be made
to morrow, the probability is that the stringency may assume a
more serious shape.
Large amounts of Governments, bought from
the Treasury in anticipation of the suspension of the sales of the
Sixty-five bonds, are now being carried upon loans, which, added
to the withdrawal of funds into the Sub Treasury, tends to
aggra¬
vate the prevailing tightness of the market.
Demand loans close decidedly stringent at 7 per cent., alike upon

—

BOARDS..

The

following statement shows the description and number ot shares sold at
Regular and Open Boards conjointly on each day and for the week ending

the

Friday:

on

Sat.
110

Bank Shares

Mon.

Railroad shares, viz.
Central of New Jersey...

Chic., Rock Is. & Pacific.
Clev., Col. and C nciunati
Cleveland & Pittsburg....
Cleveland and Toledo

•

.

•

•

8,700
5,100

2,750
•

•

•

Indianapolis & Cinn...
Michigan C ntral

•

.

coo

Milwaukee & St. P
do
do pref....
New York Central.
New York and N. II..
Ohio & Mississippi ($100)
..

Pitts., Ft. Wayne & Chic.

Reading

7,000

L., Alton & T. II....
Tol., Wabash & West’n...

10.750

“
“

•

•

•

Canton

'jetegraph—V* esi’n Bn ion

Steamship—Atlantic Mail.
Pacific Mail

..

JQcprm—Adams.
American.
Merchants*
United States...
Weils, Far. & Co




.

130

2,100

3,700

4‘,000

14,000

167

1,300

400

2,900

7,767

4,200

3,60.)

13*100

47,750

1,700

9,050

230

3,555

5,500

5,800

8 6
525

12,000

700
700

.

3,650
300

235

200

94
6

7,400

S,100

6,900

•

•

60

200
....

»

•

....

10

220

191
661

6,901

48,300

....

•

•

•

•

200

900

100

2,600

13,130

26,754

200
400

48
750

*;;;

‘800

890

1,600
5,110

126
100
965

1,375
'200

2,480
9,525

300

600
100

4:.0
700

2,767

1,820

300
600

1,500
2,500
•

300
100

....

•

500

4

100

100

....

l’ioo

.

.

1,100
300

1,017

1,066

138

100
600

.

400
900
400
300
S65

....

1*300
100

"

56
*

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

100

•

3,480

2,455

225
144
200
200
80

955
5

100
400
*

M *

•

•

•

25

•

;

100
.

1,100

....

»

159
AG
400

400
900
1,100
500

..

•

3,870
10,7u0

100
300
410
850
900
SOO
200

1,325
'450

*600

100

700
200
600
200

2,000

4.114

2,278
1,700
4,988

600

1,660
640

3

200
100

ioo

20
20

900

2,100
200

858
9

600

Discounts

close.

are

cent.

The

2.400

following

are

the quotations for loans of various classes
Per cent.

57

300

3,100
1.400

!

Percent
Good endorsed bills,
4 months
do
single names

@—
@ 7

7X@ 3

:

l

Lower grades.

United States Securities.—The

course

3 &
8

9
11

@9
@10
@15

of Governments have

steady throughout the week. The partial weakness of Fivediscouraged the disposition among foreign
houses, manifested last week, to buy up Sixty-twos ; but the scarcity
of the bonds has kept the price steady. The chief interest has
centred in the new Sixfy-fives. On Monday orders were received
by the Assistant Treasurer- to sell no more of the bonds until further
orders, anchthe sales have consequently been since suspended- This
has caused a very active demand for the bouds, under which the
price has advanced £. It now turns out, however, that a consider
able amount of the bonds had been sold for delivery in June ; and
been

150
700
181
100
250
800

twenties at London has

4,000
3,010
6,850
2,500
10,175
3,000

14,148
3,993
161
320

180

7
6

Call loans
Loans on bonds & mort..
Prime, endorsed bills, 2
months

24,197

1,558

The banks do not want paper,

under the
prevailing high rates for call loans, and the best names are nego¬
tiated on the street at 7£@3 per cent.; second class at 8^@12 per

2G0

2,34-1

....

stocks and Governments.

300
60

2,305

1,100
5,000

....

.

150

100
8,750

3,400

50

Pref

•

2,000

100

Quicksilver
Improvin't—Bost.W. Pow

“

•

50
900

1,200

....

Wilkesbarre

u

•

•

ioo

Mining—Mariposa
do

•

3,400

1,600

200

Pennsylvania

“

-

5

•

300
600

AAA

a

.

53,739
31,650
25,030

.

«•!
J
Cumberland
Del. & Hudson

4S6

....

do
pref.
..--i
Miscellaneous shares, viz.: m
Coal—American
*
^
“

71
100

G,550
6,(;00

2,900

250

1,300

St.

1,828

11,300
5,200

5

1.100

•

Week.

205

11,439
3,950
6,000

....

Michigan Southern

515

300

30

•

5,600
7, ISO

.

600
609
100

.

•

•

200

10,600

Illinois Central

•

.

2,200

..

Harlem
Hudson River

Thurs. Fri’y.

618

ioo

50

....

Del., Lacka & Western
Erie Railway
do
do
pref

330

115

Chicago & Alton, prei....

Chic. Burl. & Quiacy
Chicago & Northwestern.
do
do
Pref.

Tucs.. Wed.

20

this centre bad it not

been for the extreme dulness of every

CLOSED.

WHERE.

Minins :

Lehigh Coal & Navigation.

balance; but the difference between the

receipts and payments of to-day would show that this increase of
balance is now carried up to over ten millions.
It appears from
the statement of the Public Debt that during May the
Treasury
increased its currency balances about $38,000,000 ; and this further
increase in the balance at the Sub-Treasury, since June 1, would
indicate that nearly fifty millions of currency has been taken into
the Treasury since May 1st.
The increase in the Sub-Treasury bal¬
ance this week is chiefly owing
to the delivery of new Sixty-five3
sold by the Treasury iu May.
This extraordinary withdrawal of currency would have been

Connecting

traffic.

iu the item of

’

they are

now

coming

upon

the market, with what ultimate effect

the price remains to be seen; the Jbonds close steady at

upon

The Sub-Treasurer has announced

his readiness to redeem the

compound notes maturing June 10th, paying interest up to matu¬
rity. There are about eight millions of the notes outstanding, it is
supposed principally in the hands of the banks. As yet, few have
been presented for redemption ; and as the Treasury would proba¬
bly pay out bank currency freely in redeeming the notes, it is quite
probable that the banks may prefer to hold them until after the
preparation of their July quarterly statement, in order to keep up
their legal tender reserves. The statement of the public debt for
June 1st shows the following changes in the leading items, as com¬
pared with the figures of May 1 :
Five-twenties
Seven-thirties.

2,000,000

Inc $61,500,000 I Coin certificates
Dec.
Dec. 37, 0*',0001 Am'i ofeoininT’y..
Dec.
J,000,000 | do
doincur'cy.
Dec.
1,000,000 *
.

..

Compound notes...
United States notes.

81,000,000

71,000,000

following are the closing prices of leading securities, com¬
pared with preceding weeks :
'The

May 3. May 10. May 17. May 24. May 31. June 7.
no*
6’s, 1881 coup
5-20’e, 1862 coupons xc.107#
xc.105*
5-20’s, 1864
“
XC.105*
S^d’s, 1865
“
107*
5-20’s, 1865, N. iss..
99*
10-40’s,
7-30’s 1st scries
106#
7-30’s 2d Series
105#
7-80’s 3rd series....
105#

Railroad

and

HI*
108*
105*
106

107#
99*
106#
105*
105*

HI*

111#
109*
105#
106*

105*
106*

10S

108

99#
106#

99*
106#
105*
105*

109*

105*
105*

Miscellaneous Stocks.—The

111*
109#
105#
106*

108
99#

106#
105*
105*

course

112*

109*
105*
106*

108#
99#
106*
105*
105*

of stock

operations has been irregular. The week opened weak, and prices
steadily fell off, with an extreme dulness. Subsequently an active
demand for Hudson River upon a large increase in the earnings of
the road, causing a material rise iu price, and an active speculation
in Pacific Mail, based upon the reported increased prosperity of
the company, causing in this case also a rapid rise in the stock, in.
fused new confidence into the market.
The operators committed
to lower prices were frightened into covering their “ shorts;” and
there has been during the last two days a consequent advance
throughout the list. A comparison of prices will show an advance
of from 2 to
per cent. The market, however, has to contend
against a very stringent money market, and it remains to be seen
how far the improvement will be maintained.
The business at the two stock boards for the current week amount

against the previous week’s business 333,437 shares.
principal stocks sold were—Chicago and Northwestern, common
53,759 and preferred 31,650; Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific
25,030; Cleveland and Pittsburg 14,000; Erie 47,750; Hudson
River 9,050; Michigan Southern 48,300 ; New York Central 26,754;
Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago 9,525 ; Reading 24,197. The
miscellaneous stocks sold
make an unusually large total—Coal
1,381; Mining 7,810; Improvement 9,350; Telegraph 10,177;
Steamship 17,148, and Express 6,212, in the week’s aggregate
52,078 shares.
The following were the closing quotations at the regular board,
ed to 368,418,

The

compared with those of the six preceding weeks ;
Apr. 26.

c-

Cumberland Coal

Quicksilver
Canton Co

Mariposa pref....

New jfork Central
Erie .7
Hudson River....

Reading

Mich. Southern..

Michigan Central
and Pittsb.

Clev.

Clev. and Toledo.
Northwestern....
“

preferred

Rock Island
Fort Wayne
Illinois Central

..

30#
28#
42#
20#
97*

58*
91#
102#
67#
•

•

•

•

70

112#
33#
59*
88*
93#

313*

May 3. May 10. May 17. May 24. May 31. June 7.
31

29*
44

98#
63#
96#
104

68*
108*
72#

....

43

35#
62

89*
97*
113*

27

19#
97*
63#
97*
103#
67*
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

34*
60#
89#
96*
114

.

.

.

....

41#
17*

....

113

113

30
25

....

.

97

97#
62#
100#

58#

103

67#
109#
72*

102

102*
66#

103#
08*

.

•

>

«

•

•

•

31#
56#
87*
95
115

20*
100#
60*
109#
105#
68#

75

76*

....

33#
51*
87*
96*
115*

119

34*
58*
88#
99

“
Improv’t “
Telegraph “
Steamship1*
Express “

At
At

Thnrs.

Fri.

20

830

618

515

205

Week.
1,828

47,290

61,313

45,553

41,875

41,310

77,571

814,512

250
500

500
700

a50

56

125

1,300

100
810

1,500

3,000

1,500

1,400

1,600

1,750

800

2,300

900

1,017

1,066

800

4,114

2,280
6,688
L467

1,381
7,810
9,850
10,177

Sat.
140

shares
Railroad “
Coal
“
.

Regular Board..
Open Board... .

Total current week.
Total Previous w’k.

Mon.

700

3,480

2,555

1,525

2,200

S49

1,430

753

680

20,783

26,209

19 214

43,070

fc5,0u0

17,481
30,750

81,500

52,283
59,576

following statement;




Wed.

1,003

69,279
63,003

The transactions in shares

the

Tnes.

54,214
31,936

weekly

21,775
29,400

48,231

69,341

since

61,175
69,239

April 5

17,148

6,212

37,284

142,746

55,952

225,672

93.236 868,418

50,342
are

333,437

shown in

Steak-

Tele-

10..

“

17
24
31

430 403,804

827
826

934

1,828

June 6

The

8,028 14,750

537,600

6,600 16,730

25,501

5,511

610 581

5,900
1,300 345,054 1,820 6,250 9,300
528 465,847
505 6,160 12,150
11,761 371,270 2,463 8,300 10,150

26

11,098 14,007 2,293 424832
15,182
7,549 2,266 389 721
14,084 12,700 4.946 516 920
14,247 17,491 5,680 425 777
3,620 7,500 7,925
8,916 9,J58 383 713

1,35 • 5,950

294,415
293,377
290,750

1,151
2,163
1,583

314,612

1,381

7,870 15,875 6,007 338 679
4,000 10,050 5,254 11,828 9,038 333,437
7,810 9,350 10,177 17,148 6,212 3681418
5,600 6,950

of the amount of Government bonds
City securities, and railroad and other bonds
Regular Board on each day of the past week :

following is

a summary

and notes, State and

old at the

Company B’nds.

Week

374,000 $3,172,650
25,000

68,500

76,000
30,500

744,000
158,000
4,143,150

3,266,100

weekly, since April 5 are shown in the following tabu¬

ending

Governments

,

Friday.
April 5
April 12
April 19, (5days).
April 26

Notes.
299,750
166,000
322.800
322,150
14SJ00
567,200

May
May
May

3
10

4,628,800

17

3,363,900

22.000

Mav

24

4,355,200

85,100

May

31

1,905,600
8,172,650

333,500
63,500

6

State &

,

Bonds.
' 823,000
1,397,000
2,390,500
3,798,500
3,918,600

June

Fri.

Thnr.

555,250 576,500 505,500
577,000 303,000 608,500

904,000 1,096,900
642,600
490,500

..

Week

Wed.

$674,500 $880,90) $394,250 486,500
1,000
10,000
30.000
173,000 196,000 147,000 37,000
25,000
46,500 19,000
24,000 23,000

Total Cur.w’k.. $505,000
Previous week.
635,500

The totals,
lation :

Tues.

Mon.

Sat.
U.S. Bonds... .$362,500
U. S. Notes
2,500
State & City b’ds 115,000

'

Totai

Company

City Bonds.
297,000
651,500
38 ,900
491,000

Bonds.
138,500

amount-

1.558,250
2,335,700
3,274,400
4,770,150

121,200

179,200

158,500
203,000

643.000
620,000
682,800
515,000
S0S.500
744,000

4,910,700
5,954,50»
4,291,900
6,113,400

238,500

223,200

158,100

218,500
158,000

8,266,100
4,143,150

The Gold Market.—The

gold premium has been, upon the
fluctuations having been confined
within a range of 1 point
The high price paid for carrying gold,
in the present condition of the money market has, however, a tend¬
ency to force a gradual selling out, a tendency which has grown
toward the close of the week. The exports for the week are likely
to exceed two millions, which is beyond anticipations.
Reports
this evening by Cable of unfavorable advices from Manchester, and
weakness in cotton at Liverpool, gave firmness to the market at
the close, and the latest transactions on the street were done at 136|.
The fluctuations in the gold market during the week closing with
Friday are shown in the following table :
whole, steady during the week, the

OpenHighClosing. Lowest, eat. Range, ing.

Saturday, June' 1...
Monday,
“
3
“ 4
Tuesday,
Wedn’day, “
5.
Thursday, “
6
Friday,
“ 7

136%136#
137
136*

136*
136#
136*
136*
186*

Current week
Previous week
Jan. 1 to date

136#
137#
132#

136*
136#
132*

136*
137*
137*
1S6*
136*
136*
136# 136# 136#

The movement of coin

Tone of
Market.

0* 136# Steady.
0* 137
Firm.

186# Dull.
Dull.
0# 136* Dull.
0* 136# Steady.
0#

0# 136#

137*
137#

1*

141#

9#

1

136#
136#
136#

,

and bullion at this port for the week

ending Saturday June 1, was as shown in the following formula :
Specie in banks Saturday, May 25
<
$14,083,667
$

recoipte from California
Import of coin and bullion from foreign ports
Coin interest paid from U. S. Treasury
Treasure

Total

500

8S8,316—

8S3,816

reported supply for week

$14,972,483

Export of coin and bullion to foreign ports
Paid into U. S. Treasury on account of customs

$777,643
1,955,087—

2,732,720

%

-

Apparent excess of supply for week
Specie in banks Saturday, June 1

$12,239,763

14,617,060

-....

Deficit made up from unreported sources
$2,377,297
The transactions for the last week at the Custom House and

Sub-Treasury were as follows :

Custom

House.

,

Receipts.
May
“

„

27

"...

“

30
31
1...:

“

June

Total
Balance in

49
70

6,991,940 41
1,732,945 80

$27,547,745 14

$18,850,257 41

260,849 79

3,933,687 88
2,259,031 99
2,797,042 05

79
48
08

3,350,194
782,133
2,880,608
12,702,173
8,070,537

314.913 27
272,007 17

$1,955,086 69
Sub-Treasury morning of May 27

»

$1,135,609 28

369,930 98
826,466 31

29

Sub-Treasury
Payments.
Receipts.

$4,762,097 69

$410,919 17

28

“

119#

following statement shows the volume of transactions in
shares, at the regular and open boards conjointly, on each day of
the week, closing with this day’s business :
Bank

861

“

“

111

•

71#

34#
59*
88#
96#
114#

....

98*
58*

12

19,(5 days)

May 3

25

100

•

113

25
43

“

“

Im-

Min-

ending— Bank. ro’d.
Coal. 4ng. pro’t. graph, ship. Other. Total
5.
857 395,956 1,820 5,350 3,500 8,655 26,302 1,535 443 975

“
“

....

The

Mining

RailWeek

Apl.

108i@108f.

U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S.
U. S
U* S
U. S.
U. S

[June 8.1867,

THE CHRONICLE.

71 O

.

132,281,220 40

..

$151,131,477 81
Deduct

27,547,745 14

payments during the week

$123,583,732 67
8,691,487 73

Balance on Saturday evening
Increase during the week

Total amount of Gold Certificates issued,
in the

Included

$1,541,000.

receipts of customs were $128,00(Vin gold, and

$1,827,086

in Gold Certificates.
The following table

shows the aggregate transactions at the SubTreasury since April 6 t
Weeks

Custom

Ending
April 6....

Honse.

“

13....
20....

2,406,907

11....
18....
25....

2,170,505
2,092,583
1,964,580
2,190,166
1,116,949
2,068,648
2,006,097

June 1...,

1,955,086

“
“

May
“
“

“

27....

4....

Sub-Treasury

,

Payments. Receipts. Balances.
9,342,691
13.889,356 105,DO,790
19,351,508
22,719,558 108,548,840
14,801,590
10,329,844 112,077,074
10,480,082
18,268,424 119,788,342
37,933,020
28,401/54 110,334,049
28,272,343 40,177,571 122,239,278
16,507,815
22,966,533 128,697,997
17,042,109
20,625,833 182,281,220

27,547,745

18,850,257 123,588,782

Changes in

Balances.
Inc. 4,546,664

Inc.
Inc.
Inc.

Dec.
Inc.
Inc.
Inc.

Pec.

3,868,049
3,528,233
7,788,842
9,531,866
11,906,228
6,458,719
3,583,223

8,591,487

Date,
merely nominal demand
APr!j 6-'
for bills from importers, and transactions have been almost entirely April 13
April 20
between bankers in their own acceptances, drawn against shipments April 27
May
4
of gold and Five-Twenties.
The market closes firm.
May 11
The following are the closing quotations for the several classes May 18
May 25
June
1
of foreign bills, compared with those of the three last weeks :

Legal Tenders.

Foreign Exchange.—There has been a

May 17.
May 24.
10S%@ 109% 108%@ 109%
109%@
109%@ 109%
110%®
110%® 110%
6.12%@5.11% 6.12%@5.11%
6.10 @5.08% 5.10 @5. 8%
5.15 @5.13% 5.15 @5.12%
6.15 @5.13% 5.15 @5.12%
36%@ 30%
36%@ 36%
41%@ 41%
41%@
41%@ ....a
41%@ 41%
79%@ 79%
79%@
72%@ 72%
72%@

London Comm’l.
do bkrs’fn#

.

Paris, long
Swiss
Hamburg

Amsterdam
Frankfort...

110%@

....

5.11%@

....

5.10

@

....

5.15
5.15

@5.12%
@5.12%

..

““

do short
Antwerp

86%@
41% @
41%@
79%@

...

Bremen

Berlin

109% @ 109%
110 @110%
110%@
5.11%@
5.10 @
5.15 @5.12%
5.15 @5.12%
36%@
41%@
41 %@ 41%
79%@
72% @ 72%

@110%

110

....
.

....

41%
....

72%@ 72%

....

16,188,407
16,582,296
16,7*37,901
17,196,558
17,278,919
16,770 491
16,017,150

Specie.

664,719

51,283,776
51,611,449
51,890,959
53.054,267
5*3,474.388

53,826,320
53.536,170
52,747,308

16,881,109

Boston Banks’ statement
weeks:

Loans.

50,998,231

Circulation. Deposits.

373,796,595

10,651.615

546,625

34,8*27.683

10,645,367
485,535 ^ 10,647,184
,382,817
10,6*38,021
386,053
10,639,695
406,762
10,627.953
402,978
10,630,8*31
369,133
10,635,5*30
10,637,432
834,393

35.820,580

86,234,870
37,371,054
38,172,169
38,230,833
37,778,783
87,332,144

,

following are the footings of the last
compared with those of the two previous
June 3.

Mav 27.

May 20.

$41,900,1*00

$41,900,000

Loans...

92,694,925

$41,900,W0

Specie....
Legal tender notes

511,526
17,173,901

441.'.72
16,883 316

51.7.806
16,499,349

..

....

....
....

15,832,745

Boston Banks —The

June 7.

May 31.
109%@ 109%

....

do shrt

do

717

THE CHRONICLE.

8,1867.]

June

Capital

92,222,677

92,63*3,587

Due from other hanks
Due to other hanks.... :

11,550,24*3
11, 3s,350

12,318 867

10,959^306

13,204,014
11.119,011

Deposits

37,006.894

37,132,051

37,874,852
24,838,469

24 805,860
2S0,96l

24,725,794

Circulation (National)
Circulation (State)

279,275

283,4‘Jl

following statement shows the
The following are the comparative totals for a series of weeks
condition of the Associated Banks of New York City for the week
past :
*
Circulation. .
Legal
ending at the commencement of business on June 1, 1867 :
Loans.
New York City Banks.—The

8,000,000

7,386,506

730,470

885,320

Mechanics’

2,000,000
1,500,000
3,000,000
1,S00.000
1,000.000
1,000,000
600,000
300,000

5,236,539
3,972,563

245,526

Union...:
America
Phoenix

567,000
482,763
2,025

City

Tradesmen’s
Fulton
Chemical

Merchants’Exchange....
National....
Butchers’
Mechanics and Traders*.
Greenwich
Leather Manuf. National
Seventh Ward, National.
State of New York
American Exchange
Commerce

Broadway
Ocean

Mercantile
Pacific

Republic
Chatham

People’s
North American
Hanover

Irving

Metropolitan
Citizens
Nassau
Market .;
St. Nicholas
Shoe and Leather
Corn Exchange
Continental
Commonwealth
Oriental
Marine
Atlantic

800,000
600,000
200,000
600,000
500.000

1,500,000
2,000,000
500,01*0
300,000

Park

Mechanics’ Banking Ass.
Grocers’
North River
East River
Manufacturers & Mer
Fourth National
Central National
Second National
Ninth National
First National
Third National
New York N. Exchange .
Tenth National

154,870

6,006,442

601,947
81,953
125,059
85,236
21,748

1,939,066
1,231.057
3,091.147
1,295,372

1,337,597
960.260

500.000

1,264.079

5,000,000
3,000,000
300,000

17,312.229
II,866,260
1,217,652
5,682,735
2,746.452
2,900,900
922,825
2,805,300
1,254,846
508,075

500,000

1,000.000
300.000
1.000,000

200,000
200.000
100.000

250,000

Bowery National

791,423
.....

431,748

2,175,586

41*3.690

809,499
1,988,897

256,739
195.720

89,576

50*3,312

575,962
27.604

993.500

18,705

268,713
907,100
10,828

10,800

6,983
106

11,337

272,158

733,900

S60.049
286.533
902,9-48

8.836.804

1,4*30,768
6,537,334

4,260,849
2,*359,181

1.200.488
741,983

700,077
4*32,167

2,705,173

1,627,298

1,110,466

3.867,*380

4*30,009
230,740
518,853

1,777,697
1,232.770
1.777.004
1,566,008

403.843

410,1)00

1,*355,000
5.306.637

1,818,667

I, *364,647
1,875*033
2,136,669
958,691

379,243
289,718
578.991

471,407
1,005.820

3.023,000

211.000

2,356,422
2,828,312
2,285,004
1,010.310
1,403,967

200,100
445,700
281,719

891.566

1,185,571
4,761,3*36
476,0*18

4,414,S56
10,937,189

Dec. $3,300,291

Bn
Specie
ciirculation

The

following

Inc.

533,393

Inc,

49,786

13,724.241

II,4*33.130
929,865
5.883.780
3,124,044
2.140.392
593,662
1,722,900

251,223

4,109,442
3,491,945
*306,628

2,055,324
1,255,144

6.
13.
20.
27.

254,470.027
250,102,178
247,561.731

.

.

7,622.535 33,648,571
7,404,304 31,601,285
217,737,381
4.
9,902.177 33,571,747
250,877,558
11.. 253,682,829 14,959,590 *13,595,869
18.. 257.911,874 15,567,252 33,632,301
May 25.. 256,091,805 14,083,667 3*3.697.253
June 1.. 252,791,514 14,617,070 33,747,039
.

.

.

.

.

average condition of
for last and previous

1, *390,777

59,021,775

537.835,184

182,861,2*36

60,202.515

184,* *90,256
187,674,341
195.729,072
200.342,832
201,436,854

64,096,916
67,920,351
70,587,407

525,933,462
447,814,375
446,484,422
559,860,118
5*24,319,769
503,675,793

63,828,501
00,532,440 431,732,6*22
190,386,143 58,459,827 442,675,565
193,673.345

shows the totals of the

June 1.

Loans

Specie

369,133

334,393

4,603,678

4,456,401

Due from Banks
Due to Banks

6,667,022
37,778,783
10,6*35,530
16,740,118

Deposits
Circulation

Legal Tenders
Clearings

8,927(602

Balances

The annexed statement aho#* tftfc

for




a

67,996,639

Mriei of

52,747,3 *S
6,501.292

37,3*32,144
10,637,432
16,881.109
29,479,883

2,525,811

Decrease.
Decrease.
Decrease.
Decrease.
Decrease.
Increase..
Increase.
Increase
Decrease.
Decrease.

(Marked thus * are

.

147,277
165,739
446,6*39
1,902
140.991
8,495,348

1*391,791

benditioo ef the Philadelphia

283.806

America*
America (Jer. City) .
American
American Exchange.
Atlantic

Atlantic (Brooklyn).
Bowery'
Broadway
Brooklyn
Bull’s Head*........
Butchers & Drovers

Central
Central (Brooklyn).
Chatham

Chemical
Citizens’

Currency

Dry Dock
East River

Eighth
Fifth

(Brooklyn).

...

Fourth

Hanover

Importers & Trad...
Irving
LeatherManufact’rs.
Long Isl (Brook.) ..
Manhattan*
Manufacturers’
Mannfac. & Merch.*.
Marine
Market

Mechanics’
Mechanics’ (Brook.).
Mercantile
Merchants’
Merchants’ Exch...

Metropolitan
Nassau*...

(Brooklyn)

National (Gallatin)
New York
New York

County.
NewYorkEx change.
Ninth
North America....
North River*
Ocean

Oriental*
Pacific
Park

Peoples’*
Republic

Seventh Ward
Second
Shoe & Leaiher
Sixth
State of New

York.

Stuyvesant*
.

Tradeemen’B
Union.

....

wssosurinuiCftir**

Bid. Askd

Last Paid.

Periods.

Jan. ’67....5&3*r 140
Jan. ’67
—
Jan. ’67
4
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

115

5

May’67

115

6
6
5
12 240
5

’67
'67
’61
’67
’67

Apr. ’67

4
5

May ’67

6 110%

Jan. ’67
Jan. ’67.

6
8

May ’67

6

Jan. *67

5

1,000,000 May and Nov.. May ’67
300,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67
10,000.000 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67
lUOj 750,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67
1W 2,000,000 Jan. and July.. Jan. ’67
1W 1,000, (XX) Feb. and Aug.. Feb. ’67

6

.
.

100
100
30
50
100
100
100
1W
100

4OO’0QP Jan.

and July.

200,000

Quarterly
200,000 Jan. and July..
350,0W Jan. and July..
250,0W Jan. and July..
150,0W Jan. and July..
5W,0W May and Nov..
Jan. and July..
5,000,000 Jan and July..
30
6W,0W May and Nov..
20
160,000 Jan. and July..
25
2W,000 May and Nov.
50
300,0W Jan. and July..
100 1,000,000 Jan. and July..
100 1,500,000 Jan. and July..
50
500,000 Jan. and July..
50 ! 600,000 Feb. and Aug..
400.000 Feb. and Aug..
50
50 2,050,0W Feb. and Aug..
30
252,0W Apr. and Oct
100
500,0W Jan. and July..
100
400,000 Jan. and July..
100 1,0W,0W Jan. and July..
25 2,0W,0W Jan. and July..
50
500,000 Jan. and July..
50
500,000 May and Nov,.
25
600,000 May and mov..
100 1,000,000 May and Nov..
uly.
50 3,(XX),000 Jan. and
50 1,235,000 Jan. and July.
100 4,OW,000 Jan. and July..
100 LOW, 000 May and Nov
100
300,0W Jan and July..
50 1-,500,000 April aDd Oct..
100 3,000,000 Jan. and July..
100
200,000 Jan. and July..
100
300,OW Jan. and July..
too 1,000,000 Jan. and July..
100 1,000,01*0 Jan. and July..
50
400,000 Jan. and July..
50 LOW,000 Jan. and July..
50
3W,0W Feb. and Aug..
50
422,700 Feb. and Aug.
100 2.0O0. (XX) Jan.and July..
25
412,500 Jan. and July..
20 1,800.000 Tan. and July..
100 2,0(H). (XX* Feb. and Aug.
100 1,000,000 Feb. and Aug..
100
5W,0W Jan. and July.
100
*3W,000 May and Nov
100 1,500,000 Jan. and July.
100
200,(XX) May and Nov..
100 2, (XX), 000 May and Nov..
100, ow

..

.

.

...

279,275

Friday.

Dividend.

.

St. Nicholas’

283,514
283,491
280.961

LIST.

..

...

284.982

Jan. ’67

25
100
50
too

Commonwealth

Tenth.
Third

STOCK

100 3,000,000 •Jan. and July'...
25
100,000 Tan. and July..
100
500,000 Ian. and July...
100 5,000,000 May and Nov...
75
300,000 Jan. and July..
50
6W,000 Jan. and July..
25* >,000 Jan. and July.
100
25 1,000,000 Jan and July .
50
300,0W Jan. and July..
50
200,0W Quarterly....
25
800,0W Jan. and July .
100 3.000,000 May and Nov
50
200,0W Jan. and July
25
450,0W Jan. and July .
300 000
100
Quarterly.

Commerce

287,205
286,701

37,132,051 24,805,860
37,006,8^4 24,725,794

16,88*3,361

17,173,901

Amount.

City
City (Brooklyn)

Nassau

37,258,775

O0>

National.)

not

Phoenix

$788,862
34,740

689,878 1 6,571,736 *38.721,760 24,784,332
517,597 16,55*4,421 38,504,761 24,808,992
507,806 16,499,3*9 37,874,852 24,838 469

Capital.

Mech. Bank. Aeso...
Meehan. & Traders’.

Aggregate

296,011

BANK
Companies.

296,625

24,851,522
37.218,525 24,8*38.819
16,549,598 38,207,548 24,852.200
16,926,564 37,837,*92 24,811,4*37

441,072
571,526

92,694.925

Greenwich*
Grocers’

Clearings

$16,017,150

June

175,312

.

Mav 25.

“

92,428,114
92,633,587
92,221,677

139,119
169,896

the leading items of the Philadelphia Banks
weeks :
....

92,671,149

92,35*3.922

Fulton
Far. & Cit.(’WTn’bg).

Dec. $3,287,202
Dec. 2,102,613

Legal

$16,017,150
53,5*36,170

Capital

6
13
20
27
3....

“

First

Tenders.

Philadelphia Banks.—The following

“

First

657.200

17,818.945 26
21,776,354 75

183,861,269

16,815,855

May

218,832

$431,73*2,622 14
44*2,6i „5S5 25

Deposits.

“

929.992

of the previous week are &<* fol¬

tion.
Specie.
8,138,813 33,774.573
8,856,220 33.702,047

16,860,418

376.343
34*3,712
829,854

Corn Exchange*
Croton'

462,673

CirculaLoans.

456,751

91,712,414
92,472.815

214,459

the total? for a series of weeks past:

are

91.079.549

218.589

235,000

Legal Tenders

8
15
22
29

587.546
1,011,155

365,627
424.547

Deposits

“

1,092,454

:

Loans

“

>6tate.

Deposits. National.
17,212,423 37,026,388 24.843,376

Tenders.

91,723,347

Continental

180.000
90,000

Clearings for the week ending May 25, 1867
Clearings for the week ending June 1,1867
Balances for the week ending Mav *25, 1867
Balances for the week ending June 1, 1867

“

435.113

1

April

210.K25

883.148

14,617,t>>0*33,747,039 190,386,143 58,459.827

82,520,200 252,791,514

The deviations from the returns

904,601

1,247,816
618,732
229,137
501,037
563,433
79,829

767,414

283.500
1,000
226,331. 2,909.07 ‘
25,9*31 1,678,297
270,000
27,171
928,094
446,586
790,000

780,678

3,4S2,281
5,<366,509

1.208.391

4.056
29.544

5124,882
584,272

1,564,104
891,202
2,303,841

308.445
80.317
11.693

6.146
17.784
2.635
17.39*3

982,810

758,946
1,845,833

7,684,870
2,3*39,551
2,450,002
2,002,168
2.018,506
5,050,575

4,587
199,560
258,532
178,818
29,082
593,827
185,000
985,490
622,513
2,261,869 5,949,015
114.564
900,000
794,314
30,618
41,300
481,997
'18,S86
141,323
857,584
406,718
131,199
86,503
27,883
6,711
332,562
91,936
56,5*36
2S8,<67
■7,000
192,7S7
126,061 2,205,4*42
16,901
131,670
71.5S6
4,260
559,839
81,853
757,006
27,619
945,080
35,465
8,815
34,263
570.0-41
89,440
243, ?27
34,319
9,846
11,090
353,000
39,1*30
99,695
14,209

1,169,962
5,394,798
12,977,366
1,004,877

869,624

2,534,217

289,S35

23,096

2,180,437

350,000

4.919.779
8.655.845

600.337

3,720,249
3,207,066

400.000

1,000,000

Bull’s Head
Croton National
National Currency

.....

8.258.388
3,538,510

4,665,244
2,000,000
5,000.000 10.576,051
10,000,000 24,418,834
1,000,000
5,745,465
3.107,981
1,000,000
8,350,225
1,000.000
422.700
1,947,267
5,066,947
2,000,000
1.890,923
450,000
412,500
1,413,956
2,129,914
1,000,000
2.671.389
1,000,000
500,000
1,565,000
4,000,000 11,095,778
400.000
1.427,518
1,000,000
2,291,985
2,846,153
1,000,000
1,000,000
2,507,378
1,500,000 5,064,800
1,000,000
3,628,175
2,000,000 4,431,282
750,000
2,8SS,?21
300,000
I,212,419
400.000
1,924,774
300.000

Total..

97,865
1,488,854
208,205

3,169,037
2,688,727
2,537,131

1,‘235.000
1,500.000

Importers and Traders’..

Apr,
Apr.
Apr.
Apr.
May
May
May

Legal
Tenders.
$2,607,813
1,054,289
1,033,419

Net

Circula-

Specie.
tion. Deposits.
Capital.
$3,000,000 $6,875,628 $3,671,973 $796,453 $9,000,482
260,360
12,254
3,859,554
2,050,000 5,251,353

Banks.

New York
Manhattan
Merchants’

lows

Specie.

AMOUNT OF-

-AVERAGE

Loans and
Discounts.

200 000
100
100 t,ooo,ow Jan. and July..
100 1,000,000 Jan. and »J uly.,
40 1,000,000 Jan. and July,,
50 1,500,OOO’.M ay and Nov,,

40

906 onO**T*o»,

Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.

220

5
5
6
5
6

’67
’67
’67
*67
’67

111*
104

110

121

122"

10
6

5
5

May ’67.:

10
10

May ’67

5

u.

117% 116%

8%

Jan. ’67
Jan.’67
J

112

5 108

*67

108

5

May ’66

10

Jan. ’67
5
Jan. '67
6 118
Jan.‘67.4&2 3-10j 112
Jan. ’67
5 106
Feb. ’67
6
Feb. ’67
6
Feb. ’67
5
Oct. ’66
5
Jan. '67
5 1W
Jan. ’67
6
Jan '67
5
Jan. ’67
5
Jan. ’67
6

May ’67
May ’67
May ’67
July *67

119

112%

107

5
5
5

5&1

HO
....5 i(>9
....6 131 1133
....5 105%

Jan. ’67..
Jan. ’67...

May ’67...

...

Jan. ’67...

....5
Apr. 67 ... ....5
Jan. ’67...
5 121
Jan. ’67..9&ar2%
Jan. ’67
6
J*n. ’67...... ..5 15

111

115
5 107% 10J
5
102
6
5

Jan. ’67
Jan. ’67

(Jan. ’67
Feb. ’67

|Feb.5& May’67.5

Jan. ’67
7 146
Jan. ’66
5
Jan. ’67.. 4-fe-«a*
Feb. ’67
6
Feb.’67
C
6 lio
Jan. ’67
5
Nov. ’66
5 :io
Jan. ’67
Nov. ’65
6

5 108’ iio‘

May ’67

5
5

Jan. ’67
Jan. ’67
Jan. ’67

May ’67
I***' W

Ill

.

7% H3
...5

Mi.

«»»,
• §.

si*

*

[June 8,1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

18

SALE-PRICES AT THE NEW YORK STOCK
(REPRESENTED BY THE LAST SALE REPORTED
STOCKS

;

137

137

American Gold Coin (Gold Room).
„

OIYTCIALLY ON EACH DAY OP THE WEEK ENDING FRIDAY, JUNE 7.)

Satur./ Mon.

SECURITIES.

AND

liars,

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do*
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do'
do
do
do
do

6s

j

—.

.

.

113

coupon. Ill % ‘112

112%'112%
K>7%;107% ;103 |108
(1st issue)... coupon.\m>i 109%109% 109% 109% 109%
registered.

registered]

*106% 106%j
«u/wwjl05%'l(a%fl05%

69, 5-208..
6s, 5-20s (2d issue)

do
5.20s (new issue)...
68,5.20s,

do

j

106%}

Oregon War 1881
do.
do.
(i yearly).
115
113%
1S71
coupon.
1S71
registered.
102
1106
1874...;
coupon.
1874
registered.
99%} 99 j
10-40s
coupon. 99%) 99%
99%
5s, 10-40s
registered.
6s, Union Pacific R. R.. .{cur.).
6s,
6s,
5s,
5s,
5s,
5s,
5a,

1st series. 106% 1 Zd series.
(105%
lC5h
3d series. 105%! -

7-30s Treas. Notes
do
do
do
do
do
do

115

Registered, 1860
6b, coupon, ’79, after 1860-62 -05-70.
do

do 1877
do 1879
War Loan

do

*

100

Minnesota 8a
Missouri 6s

97%

—

do
do

49%
49%

68

50

do
do

68

47

coupon

41%
•*!

do
do
do
do

Municipal:

do
do
do

6s, Water Loan
6s, Public Park Loan
6s, Improvement Stock
Jersey City 6s, Water Loan

96

95)

do
do

—

111%
132

110

34%
58%

S8%, 88%
99
98%

117%
no

—

—

35%
f8%

Fri

132

34% 34%
58% 58%
88
88%

75% 75% 75% 76%
119
114% 114% 115

125

60%

100

60%
"

59%

59%

III

~

-

-

—-

50
109%
190 192% 103 103% 104% 1C8%
119
119
199 H7% 119% 119%
50
199
50
190
100

100
100(
199

preferred.

19%

79%

69

69%

119% 119% 111
68% 68% 68%

56%

94

do

do

.

54%

Pennsylvania

199

199

Schuyikill

30

152%

1.53% j

151

i6o%;

50

50

Spring Mountain

Spruce Hill

19

Wilkesbarre

190

.' Wyoming Valley
Gas. —Brooklyn
Citizens (Brooklyn)
narlem

36

36

50

Jersey City and Hoboken

i or

50

100

New York

50

Williamsburg.

50

improvement.—Boston Water Power
Brunswick City...„

20

26

...100
100

Cary
Telegraph.—Western Union
100 42%
Western Union,Russian Extension.100
Steamship.—Atlantic Mail
100 102
Pacific Mail
1 ransit.—Central American

100 )29
100

Nicaragua
Trust.—Farmers’

100

25%

25)

24%

United States Trust

Insurance.—Home
Rxjyress.—Adams
American

Merchants’ Union
United States

Wells, Fargo & Co
Mining.—Mariposa Gold
Mariposa preferred
Minnesota Copper
—

100
100
100
100
100 66%
500
100
100 73
100
100
100 17
50
15
25
100
25

10]

83

79
89

88

3d mortgage, conv..
4th mortgage

do
do

Fund

do

do

2d mort.

101%

101%

do 3d mortgage, 1883
do 4th mortgage, 1880
do 5tli mortgage, 1S88
Galena and Chicago, extended
do
2d mortgage
do
Great Western, 1st mortgage.
do
do
2d mortgage

l00%}

100%

100%

103
ICO

.

'

43%
43

43

do

8s, new, 1882.

Michigan Southern, Sinking Fund

j
l05%|

44% 44%

43

do

1

42%

105
133

Michigan Central 8s, 1869-72

21%

23

104%

1144% 134% 135% :38%

25

Union Trust

92%

93%

McGregor Western, 1st mortgage.c
Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st mortgage

100

Loan and Trust.
New York Life and Tru^t

cent....-

do
3d mortgage,
1875
do
convertible, 1867
Illinois Central 7s, 1875
1

20

Manhattan
MetroDolitan

(01

82%

Hannibal and St. Joseph, 1st Mortgage
Harlem, 1st mortgage, 1869-72
Consolidated and Sinking Fund
do
do
3d mortgage, 1868
Hudson River, 1st mortgage, 1869
do
2d mortgage, (S. F.), 1885

25

190
25
20

-

42%
66

Pittsburg, 2d mortgage

do

30

104%

90

Erie, 1st mortgage, 1868.
do 2d mortgage, 1879

„5U

r7..

97
97
97%! 97% 99
105%
194% 194% 104% j
42%
49%

Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 1st mort.

45

190
50
19

loo%

96%

1st mortgage

Cleveland and Toledo, Sinking
do
do new 7s

:

199
199

100
50

99%

25%

Extension

,

Chicago. It. I. and Pacific, 7

Ashburton
Butler
Cameron
Central
Consolidated
Cumberland
Delaware and Hudson

100

99
120

Interest...

do
do

Cleveland and

Voal.—American

100

100 98% 99% 99
11 % 120
.100 116
100
100
25% 25%

1st mortgage
Income

do
do

Miscellaneous Shares




75%
1:4

50

consolidated...,.
Chicago and Rock Island. 1st mortgage

New York 7s
do
6s
do
5s

Rutland Marble
Smith and Parmelee.

75%

Chicago. Burlington and Quincy, 8 per cent...
Chicago & Great Eastern, 1st mortgage
Chicago and Milwaukee, 1st mortgage
Chicago and Northwestern, Sinking Fund....

69%

67%

67

68%;

6s, new

Jersey Zinc.
Quartz Hill.. 1
Quicksilver

89

| 99

Buffalo, New York and Erie, 1st mort., 1877...
Central of N w Jersey, 1st mortgage.'.
...
Chicago and Alton, Sinking Fund

51

67%

New

Ihurs.

Railroad Ronds:

50%

49%

101

...

—

Louis, Alton and Terre Haute
..100
do
do
do
preferred. 100
Stonington
100
Toledo, Wabash and Western
50 41% 42% 42%
do
do
do
preferred.... 50
Troy, Salem and Rutland
100

99

98%

97%

6s, 1881-86

Canton

)

72

Pittsburg, Fort Wayne and Chicago
Reading

99

98)

(registered)

Rhode Island 6s
Tennessee 5s
do
6s coupon
do
6s, (new)

Brooklyn 6s

59%

.100

St.

6s, (Hannibal and St. Joseph RR.)...
6s, (Pacific RR.)
New York 7s, 1870
do
6s, 1S67-77
do
5s, 1868-76
do
7s, State Bounty Bonds (coupon)....

f

36

34%
58%

109
190

New Jersey
New York Central
New York and New Haven
New Haven and Hartford
Norwich and Worcester
Ohio and Mississippi Certificates
Panama

5s

79, War Loan, 1878

do

Wed.

..

68, War Loan

Virginia 68.

—

do
do
guaranteed. ..100
Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien'.lst pref. .100
do
do
do
2d pref.. .100
Milwaukee and St. Paul
190 34%
do
do
preferred
100 56%
Morris and Essex
100

7s (new)
Canal Bonds, 1860

Louisiana 6s

do

2d

do

.

—

199 59)
,

Michigan Central
Michigan So. and N. Indiana

74

do
do
do
do
North Carolina 6s ex-coupon
do
6s, (new)
Ohio 68,1870-75

50
100
100

I......

do

100%

Kentucky 68, 1868-72

'

50

Indianapolis and Cincinnati
Joliet and Chicago
Long Island.’
McGregor Western
Marietta and Cincinnati, 1st preferred

105% 1195%

100%

Georgia 6s.

do

190
199
199
199
190
100
100
50

do preferred
Hannibal and St. Joseph
do
do
preferred
Harlem
do
preferred
Hudson River
Illinois Central

State

Michigan 6s

199

pref

“

,

Erie.........

!i09

199

Chicago, Burlington and Quincy
Chicago and Great Eastern
Chicago and Milwaukee.
Chicago and Northwestern
do
do
preferred
Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific.
Cleveland, Columbus and Cincinnati

Tuea

118

199

.

....

California 7s.
Connecticut 6s.
do
niinois
do
do
do
do
do
Indiana
do

.

J
-06,
1166 j
I
coupon,-106% '106% 106% 106%}i06% Cleveland and Pittsburg
Cleveland and Toledo
registered,
,100% ■ 106% j
c ujx>n. ics%:ios>
108% 1108% J108%110S% Delaware, Lackawanna and Western
Dubuuue & Sioux City
101)4
104%}'
registered
4t

registeredj

6s, 5.20s
do
6s, 5.208 (3d issue)
5.20s

.

Jersey ...
Chicago and Alton
do
do preferred

coupon. 135%

registered.

5-208

Railroad Stocks

136%; 136%11

Central of New

6s,'1868
69, 1868
68, 1881
69,1881

Mon.

STOCKS AND SECURITIES

ErL

National:

.

EXCHANGE.

do
do

do
do

2d

<■

Goshen

Line, 1868

,

do
do
do

97

95

94%

97%

......

Milwaukee and Prairie du Chien, 1st mort....
Milwaukee and St. Paul, 1st mortgage
do
do
2d mortgage
Morris and Essex, 1st mortgage
do
do
2d mortgage
New York Central 6s, 1S83
do
do
do

97%

mortgage, 7s

94%

94%

94%

95%

6e, 1887
7s, 1876
7s, convertible, 1876

New York and New Haven

63%
66%
70
65

62%

63%

64

15
69

69

—

68

64%

—

7
18

25% 24

■

24

18%

j

7%
20%

2T

24%

Ohio and Mississippi, 1st mortgage
Peninsula, 1st mortgage
Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1st mort..

do
do

St. Louis,
do
do

do
do

do
do

2d mort...
3d mort...

Alton and Terre Haute, 1st mort
do

(to

do
do

..

do

2d mortgage

Troy, Salem and Rutland, 1st mortgage
l

.

Western Union Telegraph, 7s

96%

95% 96
90

90

2d, pref....
2d, income.

Toledo, Peoria & Warsaw, 1st mortgage
Toledo and Wabash, let mortgage, extended.
do

102%
96

-.

77%

719

THE CHRONICLE.

8,1867.]

June

Leading Articles from New York.
table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows the

Exports of

®imc0.

&f)e Commerncil

The following

New York
ports
the last

exports of leading articles of commerce from the port of
since January 1, 1867. The export of each article to the several
for the past week can be obtained by deducting the amount 'n
number of the Curonicuc from that here given :

COMMERCIAL EPITOME.

i-t©-*t-

a>

© OC 00-1

.

in gen¬
eral merchandise ; but many articles have been subject to pe¬
culiar influences, that give some interest to the business of the
week. *£he stringency of the money market, and new views
respecting supplies, have had a marked effect in some cases.
Provisions have been irregular. Pork closed this afternoon
at 80c. decline in New Mess for for the week, the last price
beiug $22 40. This decline is attributed to the close money
market having defeated speculative combinations. Lard and
Cut Meats have declined jc., and Bacon has become dull, but
all closing rather more steady. The large arrivals of live hogs
have been materially diminished in the past two days.
Beef
has advanced, but Butter and Cheese show a further decline.
Hides show rather more activity, but ^business is limited.
The sales to-day embraced dry Rio Grande for Boston at 18fc.,
gold. Leather and Skins remain quiet.
East India Goods are all dull.
Metals have been quiet.
We notice to-day a sale of 200 tons Glengarnock Scotch Pig
of “between seasons” business doing

SS'SS ,288S5SS
9)
t-t-

eft

as

Beef, tierces and barrels

Pork, barrels
Tobacco, foreign, bales
Tobacco, domestic, hogsheads.
Coffee, Rio, bags
Coffee, other, bags
Coffee, Java, mats
Sugar,

hogsheads

June 1.

May 1.

3,675
103,157

8,766

.

o

© ©

o

Peiroleum, crude,

Linseed, bags
•Saltpetre, bags
Jute, bales
Manilla Hemp, bales

Pig tin, slabs
Spelter, ions

52,520'
1,441

JA

OO O*

q

§

12,000

10,370

35,000
18,800

33,050

rS

f)
®

Lead, tous...

The receipts
Jan. 1, and for

)> N

1-t

Ashes, pkgs...
Breadstuff's—

-P

©

a!

171-1

12,011 22,185
1,800 253,343

Malt

Barley

8,800 43,732

43,306
Flaxseed...
7,720
213 15.368
Beans
Peas
,.102,421 194,977
C. meal,bbls. 2,958 31.031
Grass seed...

C. meal.bags.

738

m

O

ZD

&
** B

CO

*

:g

10.350
500

40.350
5,193
31,616
37,100
900

1,102 204,953

Buckwheat &
B.W. flour, bg
Cotton, bales ..
Copper, .bbls...

6,085

12,351 360,908
626 4,101

Copper, plates. 1,157
4,433
Driedfruit,pkgs
505 20,214
Grease, pkgs...
198 8,798
Hemp, bales...
10
535
Hides, No
3,574 165.071
Hops, bales. .
18 2,78*
Leather, sides .67,769 1,115,717
389
1,109
Lead, pigs
Molasses, hhds
10,901
and bbls
...

Naval Stores—
Crude

trp,bbl

Spirits turp..




s.

Pork

bbls
Tallow, pkgs...

223.2C6 Tobacco, pkgs..
3,3'>6 Tobacco, hhds..

923,032 Whiskey, bbls..
4,094 Wool, bales......
Dressed Hogs,

6,634

2.654

21,397

15,337

*

No

Rice,
bush

.

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10,599 224,390 165,198
21,698 158,716 50,553
725 75,524 99,661

91,578

315 111,355 89,533
3T 24,710 45,804
1,386 83,484 76,122
138 6,789 4,607
158 8,300 1,460
11,384 85,169 49,530
156
4,815
4,397
870
2,801

6,118
3,427
2,703

^

00“ 'eo

394,125 391,00!)
11,935
6,953

302

S

’•

•

$ :S!

.sis

T-l

o5

7,138 122,962

Eggs

3,507 Stearine
2,489 Spelter, slabs...
5,416 Sugar, hhds &

2,626 .21,427

50

Butter, pkgs..

Beef, pkgs. ...
202,038 Lard, pkgs....
Lard, kegs....
6,255 Rice, pkgs
341,417 Starch

848

70

18,053

51,171

2,133

© t-

TJ' T—l

128,834 176,973
10,385 86,709

603

OlCNCO

■

ffl.

■

»r.'

1

H

242,695! Provisions—

90 883

CO' 00 t-

.

•<&

as
co
TJ<

S tT © o*.

Week, slid since

52,3151Peanuts, bags.
Cheese
Cut meats..

o*© •
C-T-t

.

I

•

5“ cr.
oo©©co
t— © ©

2
aS

2,875
28,243
1,922

C* © CO
© ©

■

as Tt* ©
© © T-l
•OTT Oi

:©

:g

iifOlClO

©

26,080
2,274

5,200

Tar

*

CO

•©

.

’

This
Since Same
week. Jan.l. time’66.

121,435
99,883
4,103
84,200

CO ©

.CO

T*

©

•

O

700

10,277
780
72

•

T—

■

2,800

Rosin

IQ

•_ at

0
Vi

600

Pitch
818,364
Flour, bbls.. 35,800 586,349
221,654 Oil cake, pkgs
Wheat, bush. 45,314 616,843
404,8171,919, 55 2,442.379 Oil, lard ....
Corn..'
Oats
104,767 568,707 1,050,5681Oil, Petroleum.

Rye

•

2

14^900

of domestic produce for the week ending June
the same time in 1866, have keen as follows r
Same
Since
This
week. Jan. 1. time’66
2,611
137
2,635

•

.lO

ff)

^
©

a

3,000

Produce
for the
January 1.

•

•

ft

Receipts of Domestic

•

5?

P

125,000

"

CO

;©

’rt®Vcf

05

5)

< h

21,400

Cn

-r-t

•

■Ot:

; in

,

wOWW
nt©©co

•

:g

«f © oo

•

II,000
12.781

12.000
30.500

•

;<?*

O

®

4,810
11,778
674

©;
t- <

•

i"<
CO © T-t

rt

03 HO S3
.T-lCCCMOnN
© © t4
i-i co

,—t

■

£ 2 §§

879

28,600
16,800
20,000
32,000

C* 1-4

Ih

1,912

142

^

<?*

t—<

© t- ©

t

»

QO © © r-l

•

29.500
15,962

......

© •* CO
© © iji
CO CO ©

.

:8S
.2?
at
•
t—

a

28,480
36.780

33,486
150,000

E G* 5V

e©©.-it-r-'Nc-<

•

OO

•

10,050

Rice, Carolina, tierces
Gunny Cloth, bales
Gunny Bags, bales

-CO

CO

14,830

1,370
7,340

-co

-o*

r4

W

1,2»5
1,120

m —i

of

321,000

125,000
37,447

© ©

©CO^r-l® OO

.

124*000

44,428

refined, barrels....
Cotton, bales
Rosin, barrels
Crude turpentine, barrels
Spirits turpentine, barrels
Tar, barrels
Rice, E. I., bags

Petroleum

•

OO

•©COOJi-1

©

■a

.

Oics;

barrels.

©
^©.iQ 3* t^CO
‘©fofr-i fffi-f©' tf 0*

•

OO at

in

1-1

-

146,000

8,076

Molasses, hogsheads
Molasses, barrels
Hides, No

--

©

m

7,185

70

Melado, hogsheads

ef

o

S?

72,715

Su^ar, bags

i-f©

cc co

o

•

■B

25.716

34,964

OC 0*

mociwi-Hr-icj

■

®

OO C* T—I TT t—
OC ©
CO

OOiJi

12,909

48,087

i-t

.Tttt-Tft©r-.t-©Ttt

CiOCKHt-

c<

© «»

; i-i © i-^©

E-<

70

57,424
31,817

riOiosC-

C I- (
r— T-l

CO

SO

C* O*

(

t-,-i

■®©t-©'<*©00O*T-nn
,Cooc*cohc*
cr. o

©

T-l

5

96,013
4,312

23,941
6,000

42,-25

OC i-t

r-l

►-3

9,6S9
14,361
21,400
46,377
27,9'd
69,883
I,742

43,4 0
34,400
1,431

Sugar, boxes

r-t

aS

(N O

O C

>

a

81,864

106,593
8,880
17,110
31, 24

8,008
20,'163

OO® OS

C t— ®

OS © ©

t-

0

1866.
June 1.

1867.

/

^it-Tt<oo--i55T_T-c5coccc

leading articles

following is a statement of the stocks of
foreign and domestic merchandise :

4,

-

Spirits Turpentine de¬
clined to 59c. free, and Common Rosin to $3 75. But Tar
has advanced 75c.; Wilmington Thin selling to-day at $4
per bbl.
Petroleum has declined one cent.; standard white refined,
in bond, selling to-day at 25c. in bond. Tallow has been
steady. Building materials are mostly lower.
Wool shows a gradually improving demand and the mar¬
The

T1

©eoo5ost-eoTj«^<©G*e>i

&

$31, gold, ex wharf.
Naval Stores have been irregular.

of

CO t-

CO

Ot

of

Iron at

ket is firm.

VCOM
T-t

tMrH

v

■

There is a sort

•

>©l£!
: *- ©

•

t
T 05 CO
50 a* rr 00

©

>i-i

SO 50 i-t © CO 50 <M
W ©
00 CS
•CO® l-Cii-fOt•

III&ht. June 7.

Friday

1,703
4,862
45,658
31,903
70,428

2,055
2.861

70,244
17,808

u

a

04

’S
»

03

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at

isS

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'3,964 15,792

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36,714

81,769

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1,245 20,254 34,563
79.873

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Receipts and Exports of Cotton (bales) since Sept. 1, and
Stocks at Rates mentioned.

Imports of Leading Articles.

following table, compiled from Custom House returns, shows

The

the foreign imports
for the week ending

ing period in 1866
_

PORTS.

76

Coal, tons

....

2,633
505

Cocoa, bags...
Coffee, bags
39,387
CottoD, bales.
Drugs, &c.
695
Bark, Peruv
Blea p'wdTs
6j0
..

!, Cr Tartar

Gambier....

150
•

.

....

703
672

2,420

1,461
2,580
1,760
13,746

359

10,228

Lemons

121

17.462
1,849

2,578

6,440

66,766

63,043

Oranges

82
155

1,560

735
3.8.37
20,929

41

1,307

6.713
7 35

4,825

8,372

Metals, Ac.
Cutlery

682, *28 5,656,837

.

....

Nuts
Raisins

218.272

16,312
22,372
25,325

579,750
399,785

185

Cassia

64,106

119,598

30,110

30,405

156,441

67,788
99,340

....

12,012
Ginger
340
34,975
Pepper
532 Saltpetre.....

16,966

'

.

.

-

.

139,453 Woods.

192,121
77,928

225,529
176,570
542,125

443,319
31,753
448,447
1,110 Hides,undrsd. 164,895 4,474,141 3,049,515
4,716 Rice
3,193
99,537 246,204
11,sis SpieeSj Ac.

418

1.

Great

69,495

648

Fustic

Logwood
Mahogany..

1,720

2,758

25,517

16,327

83,936
60,661

9S,34>
72,9 L

7.050

2,624

555

76,329

New York, June 7*.

109,930

Florida, May 811
N. Carolina, June 7.

55,20«

3,<•11

36,879

492

Virginia, June 7
Other p’ts, June 7*.

100,227

12,451

....

26,160

26,327

....

...

72,250

3,524

97,874
51,742

959

The

receipts of cot'

decrease of abou-o two

this week at all the ports, show a
thousand bales, compared with the rea

last week the total being 14,416 bales (against 16,643
bales last week, 14,854 bales the previous week, and 18,650
bales three weeks since), making the aggregate receipts since
September 1, this year, 1,744,457 bales, against 1,890,587
bales for the same period in 1865-6. The details of the
week’s receipts are as follows:

ceipts

ui

Received this week at*—
Receipts.
New Orleans
bales
4,033
1)37
Mobile
Charleston
1,335
Savannah
1,616
Texas
2,380

Tennessee, Kentucky, &c

Received this week at—
Florida
North Carolina..

Receipts.
hales

Virginia
Total

1,393
261

j,

896

receipts for week

14,416

the

previous statement.
give the particulars of the weeks’ shipments from all

Philadelphia

our

—Exported this week to—
Liver-

From—
New York
Baltimore

pool.
4,100

Bre-

Havre.
1,593

men.

999

Ham-

bur/t
7£

,St.

Fetersb’g. Total.
6,765
'384

S84
.

207

207

14.226

New Orleans
Savannah
Galveston

580

959
580

Apalachicola

3,011

3,011

Total this week

892

9,9

8,282

•

492

36 3S7

12.451

87;760

....

....

26.647

320

....

16,778

999

892

15,118

27,021

It will be noticed that the movement this wreek is

130,090
843
•

•

.

•

•

I

.

£40,000

667,934 320,500

dling Uplands reached 28c. per lb. The effect ot the Liver¬
pool advices has, however, been in a measure neutralized by
the closeness of the money market and the steadiness with
which receipts, as advised by telegraph, have been maintained.
The market became dull on Wednesday and closed heavy,and*
on
Thursday, with the report of a downward turn at Liver¬
pool, the decline amounted to fully one cent from the highest
point. The demand for the week from shippers and spinners
has been moderate, but the speculative transactions early in
the week were large.
Sales have been about 15,000 bales, and
the following are the closing quotations :
Upland.
lb

Ordinary
Good Ordinary,
Low Middling.

...

...

Middling

...

...

21
24

21

23

23

25#

25#

27 *

27
29

29

The exports of Cotton this week
small though in excess of last

M obile

Florida.

21

tinue

The

week.

.

N. Orleans
A Texas
21
24

26>;

26
28
30

28
31

from New York con¬

week, the total ship¬

amounting to "only 6,705 bales against 3,490

ments

particulars of these shipments are as

bales last
follows :

Liverpool, per steamer—Java, 113
Tripoli, 259 — Etna, 74... .Penn¬
Manhattan, 1,033. 9otal
sylvania, 1,877
City of i altimoie, 714

To

hales
To Havre, per steamer—Europe, 394....Per ship-Emma, 1,199.
bales
To Bremen, per steamer—Hansa, 599... Atlantic, 400. Total
To Hamburg, per steamer—Germania, 73. Total bales
,

Total

bales

4,100

bgg
999
73

of Cotton
last four
weeks ; also the total exports and direction since September
1, 1866; and in the last column the total for the same period
Below we give our table showing the exports
from New York, and their direction for each of the

of the

previous year

Exports of Cotton

:

_

(bales) from New York since Sept.

1,1866

Total
,

EXPORTED TO

May
14.

7,335

Liverpool
Other British Ports

....

Total to Gt. Britain..

ports:

•

3,011

WEEK ENDING

this week continue small, although somewhat
of last w eek, the totals from all the ports reaching

we

•

....

37,021

....

The market this week opened buoyant and fairly active on
the favorable accounts from Liverpool,, and on Tuesday Mid¬

1,530

27,024 bales, against 23,585 bales in
Below

58,254
897,121

1,744,457 1,073,038 170,552 104,503 1,348.093

Total

The exports
excess

•

95,425 13,337
76,42S 11,6 7

98.883

6,512
321,454 25,714 49,953
....

....

206,689 86,040
57,063 32,942
71,161
5,651

130,735

....

STOCK.

PORTS.

544.220

Texas, Mav 24

...

NORTH.

Total.

364,100 135,993 44,127
3,036
4,362
123,337

Good Middling

Friday, P. M., June 7, 1867.

SHIP-

for'gn.

679,340
224,631
142,050
212,717
157,322

N. Orleans, May 31.
Mobile, May 31
Charleston, May 31.,
Savannah, May 31..

COTTON.

in

France Other

Britain

■

...

26

228,216

1,811 Fruits, Ac.

296

9
21

193,626

'

1,209

Jewelry, Ac.
Jewelry

139.173

6,645
89,463

4,979

..

.

149

Hides,dres’d

Watches....
Linseed
Molasses

4,746
13.460

15,204

Bristles

1867.

105,997
83,382
Tin. boxes..
262,2S9
356,191
Tin slabs,lbe214.627 1,847.697 3,7V7,v30
3,160
22,454
9,936 Rags
33,992
1,68S
9,6% Sugar,
hhds,
2*27
143,801
131,045
tes & bbls.. 21,039
191,592
676 Sugar.bxsAbg 4,171
127,447
440,458
10,789 Tea
536,942
23,175
561
11,850
6,547 Tobacco
13,897
3S
7,328
4,236
2,014|Waste
1,699 Wines, Ac.
59 307
7,082
42,194
Champ, bkts
200,102
2,388
Wines
54,449
1,048
37,001
20,049
42,715 Wool, bales... 2,002
406 Articles reported by value.
64,079 Cigars
$9,161 $177,717 $693,917
71,999
118,576
14,776 Corks
6,237
21,085 Fancy goods.. 61,124 1,724,758 1,898,858
321,201 578,047
7,260 Fish
1,481

59,676

...

.

Same
time
1866.

Since

Jan.1,

4.759
8091

500
649
12

.

8,772

Steel

1,550

Flax
Furs

India rubber..
Ivorv

Spelter, lbs.

1,566

m

Soda, ash...

Hemp, bales..
Hides, &c.

382,905

167

5

Soda, sal....

Gunny cloth

•

33

...

Opium
Soda, bi-carb

380,923

....

Indieo
...

Iron.RRb’rs
Lead, pigs..

11,657
8,083

Gum. Arabic
Madder.
Oils, ess
Oil, Olive...

7,227

3.697
702

...

Gums, crude

48,480

7,034

8,301

For
the
week.
166

Hardware...

2,36S
25, *194

449
8
20

Brimet. tns.
Cochineal...

Same
time
1866.
3.176

TO—

M"NT8 TO

8INCE
SEPT.

Since
Jan. 1,
1867.

1

EXPORTED SINCE SEPT.

REC*D

[The quantity is given in packages when not otherwise specified.]

Buttons

Hair

of certain leadiug articles of commerce at this port
May 81, since /an. I, 1867, and for the correspond

:

For
the
week.

‘

[June 8, 1867.

THE CHRONICLE

720

Havre
Other French ports..

Bremen and Hanover

Hamburg
Other ports.
Total to N. Europe

Spain, Oporto and Gibraltar

..

—

May
28.

6,955
....

7,335

6,955

567

1,450

....

Total French

| May
"•

....

2,263
....

2,263
711
....

June
3.

Same
time

to

prev.

date.

year.

4,100 315,107 364,047
6,057 17,937
....

4,ICO 321,454 380,984
1,593
....

25,708

33,396

6

88

567

1,450

711

1,593

25,714

33,484

301
160
75

051
129

177
339

999
73

30,588
12,404

17,745

536

....

1,08

»

...

516
....

....

....

1,072
....

*152

All others

5,149

15,097
6,027

4-’, 141

38,869

860
952

1,364
754

mostly
i
2,118
152
1,812
Total Spain, etc
to Havre instead of Liverpool.
The large stock of Ameri¬
8,438 I 9,637 ! 3,490
6,765 397,121 455,455
can cotton at Liverpool, and the fact that the Bank of
Eng¬ Grand Total
Receipts of cotton at the port of New York tor the week
land has refused to discount American cotton paper, will
and since Sept. 1
Since
This
probably account for this change in the current of shipments.
Since
This
week. Sept. 1.
week. Sept. 1.
The total foreign exports from the United States since
Bales Bales.
From
Bales. Bales.
From
South Carolina
1,295 52,427
2.462 118,854
New Orleans
Sept. 1 now amount to 1,348,093 bales, against 1,412,726 Texas
185
30,5'.)0
56,084 North Carolina
3,174
952 72,972
90,002 Norfolk, Baltimore, Ac..
1,880
bales for the same period last year, and the present stocks Savannah
1,272 114,387
Mobile
24,876 Per Railroad
1.131
Florida
are 320,500
31,512
bales, against 382,894 bales at the same time
12,351
Total for the week.
591,704
in 1866. Below we give our usual table of the movement
Total since Sept. 1.
of Cotton at all the ports since Sept. 1,showing at a glance
The following are the receipts of cotton at Boston, Phila¬
the total receipts, exports, stocks, &c.:
delphia and Baltimore for the last week, and since Sep¬
....

....

—

*

.

.

....

.

.

....

* In this
table, as well as in our general table of receipts, &c., we deduct
from the receipts at each port lor the week all received at such port from other
Southern ports. For instance, each week there is a certain amount shipped
from Florida to Savannah, which in estimating the total receipts must be de¬
ducted as the same shipment appears in the Florida return. We are thtia partlcttlnr in the statement of this fact* as some of ottr readers fail to understand it.




tember 1:

* The
receipts given for these ports are only the shipments from Tennessee
Kentucky, «fec., not otherwise enumerated.
t These are the recefnt* at all thn ports of Florida to May 8L sxcf pt
Apalachicola, which are Only to May . 24
% Estimated, The stock it New xofk is itl&o estimated.

New Orleans—
Texas

Savannah
Mobile
Florida
South Carolina
North Carolina

14,185

•

•

•

9,281

•

•

•

.

>

125

8,728

1,893

61,421

....

405

26,160

—

.

6,478

....

200

....

6,687
2,297
13,423

109

2,387
927

•

•

•

103

.

212

+20,581

491

-

.

....

....

....

30,243

t This does not include the

exports this week from these cities amount

Liverpool

to

were

in all to

follows:

as

From Baltimore—To Liverpool, per steamship Carroll, 384 bales
From Philadelphia—To Liverpool, per steamship Bosphorus, 207

384
207

bales.
bales

Total this week.,

Shipping News.—We

60,750

204,564

894

40

have

Exported this week from—
New Orleans—To Havre, per

the

same

591

information with

:

Total bales
ships Thos. Freeman, 3,905 — United

Helen Clinton, 3,795... per barks Wapella, 2,000

States, 3,325

14,226

Abbie N. Franklin, 1,201
To St Petersburg, per bark Grief, 892
Savannah—To Havre, per bark Blanch, 959
Galveston—To Liverpool, per brig F. J. Merriman..

Apalachicola—To Liverpool, per

892
959
580
3,011

3,011

..bales. 19,668

Total exports this Week from Southern ports
and

American cotton:

Ordinary
and middling.
17

18
12

11

Upland

9#@10

Mobile
New Orleans.
Texas

9# @10
•9 #@10#

9#@10#

11
11#
11#
11#

•1867.Fair and

taken place iu the position
days. On the whole the
From January 1 to April 25, the exports were as

market is

steady.

good fair.
20

24

14
13
13

16

33
17

.

.

#

.

.

.

.

.

Mid.

fine.
64
18

27
18
12

Fair. Good
33
52
20
22
14

12#

14

14

12#

..

12#

..

14#
15#
15#

Liverpool

bales.
15,787
4,548
523,595 455,584#

Total Great Brit’n

539,382 460,132#

.

Upland
Mobile
Orleans

.

.

•

....

1866.
Bales.

120,000
636,400

773,840
4-1,590
1 20,000
603,330

1,821,260

1,541,760

59,530

...

Total

exports from Liverpool, Hull and

'

other out-ports since

:
Since Jan. 1^»
1866.
1867.

This
week.

79,996

24,534
4,765
5,040

3,594
195

Egyptian
West Iudian
East Indian
China and Japan

10,202

Total

28,415

Annexed are the
week and year:

1867.
Bales.

1,005,330

Stock at Liverpool
“
London
American cotton afloat
Indian
“

American
Brazilian

-

111,033
58,8 7
10,536

Total*
1866.

208,015
111,6'5

146,977
1,350

147,710
1,523

19,524
14,813
773,141
9,387

262,662

333,091

1,136,565

3.402

particulars of sales, imports and stocks for the

SALES, ETC., OP ALL DESCRIPTION8.
»
Total
Same
Average
Speculathis
period weekly sales.
Trade, port.
tion. Total, year.
1866.
1867.
1866.
American....bales. 23,860 7,430 1,140 32,430
568,620 560,910 19,670 17,830
Brazilian
5,150 3,350
8,500 127,910 156,550 4,510 5.030
Egyptian
3,050
700
90 3,840
90,570 97,430 4,020 3,730
West Indian
1,310
730
50
2,090
36,790 35,050 1,380 1,360
East Indian
14,620 7,380
600 22,600 454,440 408 570 12,060 13,200
China and Japan
50 ....
50
2,800
1,790
20
30
,

559,173#4S5,411#

Total

TOBACCO.
Friday, P. M., June 7, 1867.

exports of moment from Baltimore

In the absence of any
this week the aggregate

shipments of Tobacco from all the
considerable falling off, the total hhds. this week
reaching 2,177 hhds. against 4,322 hhds. last week. The
stocks at the principal ports are, however, increasing, the
ports show a

total at

Baltimore and New Orleans, June 1,

New York,

hhds. against 34,307 hhds., May 1, and
The following table gives the particu¬
shipments from all the ports.

amounting to 43,105
33,305 hhds. April 1.

Sales this week.

48
46

Baltimore
Boston

Philadelphia

1
7

Total

47,990 19,640 1,680

69,510 1,281,1301,260,300 41,660 41,180

53

50

we

give

of Tobacco from

•For latest news respecting the

Liverpool cotton market seo Telegraph des*
oi this paper,—




lbs.

67,302
2,996
....

8,572

24

46

,

Total this week
2,177
Total last week
4,3 >2
Total previous week.... 2,876

Below

24

1

San Francisco
New Orleans

77 )
522

426
492

3,217

229

58
3

....

....

101
625

78,870
88,700

....

187

58,278

....

99

21

....

usual table showing the total exports

our

all the ports of the United States, and their

1806:

,

the United States since Novem¬
ber 1, 1866.

Exports of Tobacco from

Hhds.

To

4,680
20,865

Holland

.

.

Italy

.....

Cer’s &■—Stems—, Pkgs. Manfd,
Cases. Bales, tcs. hhds. bales. &bxs. lbs.
790
316
70
1,099,699
1,453
664
609
6 2,617
18.539
207,650
5,074
...

422
69
16
25
598
61

3,884
9,851
6,949

France

Mediterranean
Austria

5,443
1,066

...

14

Africa, &c
China, India, &c.
Australia
B. N. Am. Prov..
South America...
West Indies
East Indies

.

.

•

.

.

,

4

•

.

•

•

.

.

•

•

374
.

,

•

•

...

•

,

...

...

•

#

m

.

.

•

.

•

.

113.040

3

1,829,286

1,299
1,360

142,659
360,045
42 -,493

441

.

316

...

.

.

.

3,678

...

•

...

•

609

2,991

5

50

8,906

6,949

4,961,103

...

...

368

.

436

...

...

25,293 10,786

...

...

...

*

...

...

%

17,276
46,411
18,215
586,019
72,605

466
50

•

...

...

.

•

23.124

.

...

•

...

•.

,

.

...

1

92
,

...

...

.

.

...

...

.

.

4

...

,

.

...

3,419

.

.

15
30

•

*

...

.

...

11
1,382

All others
T’l since Nov. 1, 186659,146

.

•

99

125

•

•

•

...

443
76
619
626
372
37

•

...

97

1
•

•

1,565

••••

Honolulu, &c

.

542

669

...

.

...

247

15
436
148
.

•

...

1,171

....

Mexico

ports from which the

The following table indicates the
above exports have been shipped :

Tcs.&,—Stems—»Bxs. &

Hhds. Cases. Bales,

From

erns.

21

Philadelphia

31

.

213

Virginia
Total since Nov.

1....59,146

45

29

—

SPANISH

609 5,949 4,961,103

368 2,991

Havana,

Cuba,

Yara,

bales.

bales.

bales.

Total

....

-

reshipmentB to May 31, ’67..

Stock on hand June
Same time 1866
“
“
1865

...

H9
127
OF

bales.

604
275

•

•••

"i3

...

,

!!"
no

DOMESTIC TOBACCO.

Ky. Va.&N.C, Ohio,
Stock Mav 1, 1867
Received sined

i

Delivered since,
1,. 11 s i 111 i i j 11

Md.,

Total

Hhds. Hhds. Hhds.
26
21
13,582
26
o,856

12,9:34
8,107

Hhds.
601
159

21,104

760

47

26

21,987

5,268

192

3

1

5,494

imS

tto

~44

»

1m«

Hhds.

JilhO 1) 166b11»lit

bales,

748
144

2,420

1,1867

STATEMENT

Sagua, Cienf.

1,198

on

Sales &

....

TOBACCO.

hand Mayl, 1867
Received since
Stock

70,579

120

387

117

...

25,29310,786

STATEMENT OF

609 1,542 4,71<>,457
...
12 180,067
3,358
530

47

211

San Francisco

Lbs.

hhds. bis. pkgs. mani’d.

206 1,450
1,541
45

28,196 22,097 8,873
25,910
39
» 924
2,872 1,697
20
14
3,862
...
124

New York
Baltimore
Bostou
Portland
New Orleans

Total

patches at the close of onr London letter in a previous part
CMddttout, & FtruHcux. G*jtoaK&s,

Pkgs.

.,

Ex-

....

Man’f,

,

Exportedthis week from Hhds. Case. Bals. Tcs,&c. hhds. bales.
New York
2,037
770
376
....
58 ....

Spain, Gibralt.&c

1864. 1865. 1S66, It: 67
1864. 1865. 1866. 1867.
d.
d.
d.
d.
d.
d.
d.
d„
Middling—
14
Pernambuco,. 28
18
34
40
27
12# 11#
11
Egyptian.
28
27# 13# 13
12#
15# 12
6
Broach...
17#
8
7#
2S# 15# 12# 11#
6
Dhollerah
17
8
7#
28# 15# 12# 11#

January 1, have been

2,137

13.—Business is very quiet at 16d. free on board
good fair produce. The total ship¬
191,314 bales, viz.: 168,864 bales to
England, 22,197 bales to France ; and 10,253 bales to Austria.

Belgium
•

The stocks of cotton in London and Liverpool, including the supplies
of American and Iudian produce afloat to these ports, are now as under.

The actual

19,791# 23,142

Continent.
China

Alexandria, May

Germany

....

.

1867
bales.

for fair, open, ginned, and 16^ for
ments since October 1, have been

Great Britain

following statement shows the prices of middling qualities of cot-

.

1866.
bales.

1867.

1866.
bales.

Destination.
London

direction, since November 1,

1866.-

>,

Good and

ton at this date in each of the last four years :

Sea Island...

3,409,020 773,8401,005,330 1,136,^65

-Stems

correspondent iu London writes as follows : *
Liverpool, May 25.—A fair amount of business has been transacted
in cotton this week, the total sales having been 69,510 bales, of which
speculators have taken 1.880 bales, exported 19,640 bales, and the
trade 4*7,990 bales.
Holders, however, have freely met the market,
and have, in many cases, accepted a reduction in price averaging ^d.
per lb. As compared with Saturday last, ordinary and middling
American cotton shows a fall of ^d. to fd.; and Ea*t Indian of £d. per
lb. On the other hand, Egyptian cotton has risen £<1. to ^d.; but
Brazilian barely supports last week’s rates. Annexed are the prices of

Middling—

773,141
9,387

95,440 371,520
2,370
2,220

1,544,675
12,993

Bombay, May 21.—Very little change has
of the cotton market during the last few

lars of the weeks

Indian Cotton Markets.—In reference to these mar

our

Sea Island....
Stained

19,524

14,813

29,600

24.800

90,274

given above the vessels in

ports; we now add

regard to the Southern ports

European

200,083

23,875 1,361,8581,7S8,731

Total

foreign shipments for the week were made from

the Northern

The

67,010

....

railroad receipts at Philadelphia.

591 bales all of which

kets

697

East Indian.
China and Japan

411,360
199,880

49,822
624,420

1866.
208,015
111,685

1866.

day.

759,051 744.556 1,156,130 439,600
217,877 245, 79
404,S65 144,690
47,063

846

>

Same
date Dec. 31%

This

Total
1866.

132,49 121,314

1,380

Egyptian

West Indian

....

....

•

19,902
1,750

American
Brazilian

Stocks

* <

To this To this
This
date
date
week.
1867.
1866.

under:

Reshipments.

which the

207

....

•

....

215,325

bales 2,374

•

Imports

,

....

6,966
1,020

29
76

6,036
660

receipts

•

•

Sep. 1.
»

•

386

112

60

&c*.
Tennessee, Kentucky, &c...

•

28,342

"26

Virginia

The

•

•

16,2&5

New York,

*

week.

Sep. 1.
63,446

Since

Last

Since

week.

Receipts from—

^-Baltimore.
Since
Last
week. Sep. 1.
9M

r-Phiiad’phia.—.

,—Boston.—*
Last

Total

721

THE CHRONICLE.

1867.]

June 8,

....

Brooklyn

From Baltimore—To Liverpool

3,588 hhds.

inspection—Stock May 1,1867

Received since

9

5,369
1.079

Total

20,766

26.610

kgs

To Hayti 50 bales

pkgs.

Nf.w Orleans.—The

25,719

.

.

lbs., manufactured

.

To Buenos Ayres 1 case .. .To Barbadoes
To British Provinces 20 hhds, 6 cases, and

From Philadelphia—1To Kingston, Ja., 4,778 manufactured lbs....To
3,791 manufactured lbs.
From San Francisco—To British Columbia 1 case and 24 boxes.
From New Orleans—To Havre lohhus
To Bordeaux 31 hhds.

4,290

Total stock
Same time, 1866
“
1865

transactions since

our

Havana

review of last Wednes¬

day morning have been on a limited scale, more in consequence, how¬
ever, of a difference of views between buyers and sellers and the ab¬
sence of the more marketable descriptions, than to the want of demands
The stock now on sale is chiefly made up of the lighter grades, while
the demand is principally for heavy, gummy tobaccos, suitable for Bre¬
men and other German
markets, and for Africa. Buyers, however,
would soon clear the markets of such lots as are offering if holders were
a little more yielding in their demands, but the
latter continue to be *

Trade has been
fairly active for Kentucky Leaf, and prices have been sup¬
ported. Towards the close, however, with assortments some¬
what impaired, there has been less doing. The rapid increase
of stocks at New Orleans, with the possibility of a material de¬
cline in that market, is somewhat diverting the attention of
buyers. The sales of the week foot up about 800 lihds., main’
ly for export, at prices within our quotations. The home
trade is doing but very little.
In Seed Leaf Tobacco the movement has again been large,
and almost entirely for export.
The sales amount to about
1,500 cases, including the following: 258 cases Ohio, 9^c.;
somewhat irregular.

The market has been

(

54

1, 1867

Brooklyn Inspection Warehouse, June

41 hhds., 1 case, and 2,996

.To Demarara 7 hhds,
From Boston—To Africa 'Mi hhds
...

1,781

.

Delivered since
Stock in

[June 8,1887,

THE CHRONICLE.

722

very

We have only learnt of sales to

firm iu their views.

the extent of

Receipts for the week 670 hhds. Expe rts of t he week—to
Havre 15, and to Bordeaux 31 hhds.
Stock on hand 3,714 hhds.
Virginia.—At Richmond the breaks continue large. Market anima¬
ted and active for all^ desirable tobaccos at good prices, while nondesciipts are almost entirely neglected, and prices are low. Very common
tobacco, of light weights and funked, will not pay expenses of transpor¬
tation, etc„ The transactions on the 4th, embraced 243 hhds., 23 tierces
and 31 boxes offered, and sold as follows :
Manufacturing Tobacco.—Lugs common to medium, dark working,
$4(c<)7 ; good, dark working, $5(<7>S ; sun cured, common, $8@10 ; sun
cured, good, $10@15 ; coal cured, common, $S@1U ; coal cured, bright,
£12(3)18 ; coal cured, fancy, $20(3)15. Leaf, common, dark working,
$6(3)9 ; medium, dark working, $10(3)12 ; good, dark working, $11(3)14 ;
fine and wrapping, $15(3)20; sun cured, $15@25@30; yellow wrappers,
common, $20@35 ; yellow wrappers, medium to extra, $35@100@
100 hhds.

Ohio, private terms; 20 cases common Ohio 2^-c.;
Ohio, private terms; 100 cases Pennsylvania, pri¬
vate terms; 105 cases fine Pennsylvania, for export to South
America, about 32c.; 151 cases choice Connecticut, crop of
1866, private terms; 230 cases new Ohio, 7J@llc.: 150
"cases Connecticut, crops of 1865 and 1866, private terms; 25
cases Connecticut, 17c.; 110 cases Connecticut, crop of 1866,
128
private terms; 99 cases Connecticut, crop of 1866, 16c.
.
Manufactured Tobacco continues dull. In Foreign Tobacco
Shipping Tobacco.—Lugs, very common and heavy weights,
$44(3)54; good, $6@S. Leaf, English shipping, $16.(3)18(3)22;
we notice sales of 100 bales Yara on
private terms, and 150 medium,
continental shipping, $12(5)18(3)20.
bales Havana at 65@85e.
Stemming Tobacco.—Leaf, common, $10(3)13; good, $12(5)15; fine,
109

cases

100

cases

•

.

$16(3)20.

QUOTATIONS IN CURRENCY.
KENTUCKY

Light.
Heavy. ••
Common Lugs.. 4 @ 4#c.
@ ..
Good Lugs
4%@ 5#
5#@ 6#
Common Leaf... 6 @ 7
7 0 8^
Medium
do
7>£@ 9#
9 @11#

At Petereburgh,
have been heavy.

(HHDS.).

LEAP

Light.
Heavy.
10 @12£c. 12 @15
16 ©IS
.13 ©14

Good Leaf
Fme do
Selections

.15

19

©16

LEAF

(BOXES).

“

“

Wrappery lots

“

“

Fine wrappers

7
25
45
5
8

New York State Fillers
“

“

“

“

New

Old Crop.

Connecticut & Massachusetts Fillers

Average lots

©35
@ 0

15
2

Wrappers

Pennsylvania and Ohio Fi lers
•*
Average lots
“
“
Wrappers

6

@12

©30
© 3

4#® S
10 @25

“

Crop.

4>i® m
10 @14#
15 ©30
3#© 4#
6 @13
10 @18
2#@ 3#
7 @10
10 @18

©10c.

quiet; sales for the week embrace about 200 hhds., mostly new colory,
and at prices showing no material change.
In Kentucky leaf, we notice
some iitile inquiry for new, with small sales at fair prices, but old stock
is still neglected. Inspections for the week 2,580 hhds. Maryland,(42
reinspected) 893 Ohio, (19 reinspected) 56 Kentucky, (5 reinspected)—
total 3,529 hhds. Cleared same period 41 hhds. to Liverpool and 7 to
West Indies—total 48 hhds.
Stock on hand 21,519 hhds.

Manufactured.

Black work—com., tax

good

paid. 25 ®30c
“
40 @'5c
“

tine

60

@70e

25 @10c
45 @75c

Bright work—common “
good
“

Fine, tax paid. 80 ©1 25
work,medium, in bond 8 @12c
14 @17c
g. od & tine
Bright work, medium... “ 15 @4f’c
good & line “ 50 @S5c

Black

FOREIGN.

Havana.—Fillers—Common.
“

“

The

Nov. 1,

Good
Fine

60© 70
75© 85
90@1 00

Havana.—Wrappers

55@1 05

Yara, average lots

00 ^

70

receipts of tobacco at New York this week, and since
have been as follows:
RECEIPTS

NEW

AT

YORK SINCE

NOVEMBKR

hhds.

pkgs.

Virginia

3'2

2,42 >

Baltimore
New Orleans

105
99

61
13

2,S91

2,621

From

Ohio, &c
Other

hhds.
2,538
1.688

Total

8,427

.

following

for the

are

past week :
EXPORTS

Liverpool
Glasgow
Bremen

Hamburg..
Antwerp
Rotterdam
Santander
Lisbon
Gibraltar
Genoa
Africa
Cuba

Hayti
Other West Indies
Guiana
New Granada

The

8,065
403

124

a

very

853

general further decline, but the

steady.

decline of 50 cents to
and the long dulness have brought

prices of flour show a further

$1 per bbl. But the decline
in a belter demand from the

21,922

25,960

trade, and the close is relatively

steady, with a fair business for local consumption and coast¬
wise shipment, part of the latter to the British Provinces,
the exports of tobacco from New York which have bought very little in this market for several months.
The receipts of flour at this market, though somewhat in¬
creased, are still light, and have materially fallen off in the
OF TOBACCO FROM NEW YORK.*
past two or three days ; but they promise to be large again
Manuf.
Stems,
next week, and receivers meet the demand freely at the de¬
lbs.
Hhds. Cases. Bales. Hhds. Boxes.
cline.
At the West receipt and stocks are increasing. This
25
66
83
34,803 is
especially true of Chicago.
20
4
74,503

32,409

5,115

35,886

....

173

529

222
20

96

,

.

58

75
103
.

79,623

,

.

....

.

Loudon

pkgs.

2,643
1,787

853

close is rather more

53 380

5,322

19,301

124

The market shows

hhds.

pki^s.
3,004
390

23,009

....

Friday, June 7,1867, P. M.

T’l sin. Nov 1-,

56.960

4,990

BREADSTUFFS.

1. I860.

Previously—•.

This week^

The

1 20@2 00

Yara

sale of loose,
tobacco open¬

ing, and and as a general thing the crop is quite dirty and very much
lacking in character. For good descriptions of tobacco there continues
a
very fair demand and at good prices, while nondescript, dirty and in.
ferior sorts are selling very low.
Poor, dirty lugs are hardly worth
sending to market. We quote poor to common lugs at $2 25 to $4 ;
good lugs, $5 50 to $8 ; poor to middling leaf, $5 to $10 ; fair to good,
$12 50 to $18 ; yellow wrappers, common, $18 to $25 ; fair to good,
$30 to $50 ; fine, $60 to $85. Receipts this week 440 hhds ; last week
402 hhds.
Total since Oct. 1,4,054 hhds.
Maryland.—At Baltimore the receipts continue heavy, particularly
of Mar) laud leaf, and the market still active, with prices well main¬
tained, though, in some few instances, favoring buyers.
Ohio is rather

©20

..

SEED

the breaks the past week, and the
There is a great deal of undesirable

*

8,124

.

.

..

4

3-6
15!

in

117
678
09

12,013
A

4.865

5.246

21

163

.

.

.

.

•

•

•

•

2,190

2

63
7

Wheat has declined I5@30c. per bushel,
decline in some of the finer grades is even

and the nominal
greater, say 50e.

Probably the best White Wheat on the market would not
bring much if any over $3, and while California cannot be
sold in large parcels over $2 50@2 75, sound grades of
Spring Wheat approximate export prices, and are better held
at the close.
At the West, the receipts continue on the in¬
creased scale, heretofore noticed, and prices have declined 50c.

bushel. No. 2 closed-yesterday at Milwaukee at $2 08
bushel, with receipts for fhis day of 58,000 bushels. We
Total export for the week
2,057
770
have had 22,000 bushels Spring Wheat in by canal from Os¬
The exports in this table to European ports are made np from mani
wego, but there is now scarcely any wheat'on the canal for
fests, verided and corrected by an inspection of the cargo.
tide-water; the receipts by lake at Buffalo and Oswego go to
The direction of the exports for the week, from the other millers or into store. Including that afloat, we have now a
I stock in this market of about700,00Q bushels. The consumpports, have been as follows ;
....

.

*




8

376

5S

.

24

67,302

per
per

723

THE CHRONICLE.

8,1867.]

June

reduced, and it is thought we shall get down, and the supply to come is still considerable. Flour is in good
request for export at $5 50(®7 *25 ; and wheat, choice, $2 20, fair $2@2 10:
through comfortably to a period of more liberal supplies.
The exports for the past ten days have been as follows : The “ Con¬
Corn has declined 15@20c. per bush, cargoes of good new stitution,” for New York, via Panama, carried 5,440 half and 83,943 qr,
mixed beiDg sold yesterday at $1.08.
The receipts for some sacks flour ; the “St. Charles,” for New York, had 83,322 sacks wheat,
valued at $77,187 ; the “ Mary E. Packer,” for same, carried 9,266 half
days exceeded the sales, and the accumulation being finally and
10,4 25 qr. sacks flour, 6,198 sacks wheat; the “ Nereid,” for same,
pressed upon the market resulted in the decline noted. To¬ ttaci 5,398 half and 5,331 qr. sacks flour, 6,974 sacks wheat; the
day the market is the turn better, export orders have been ex¬
Autocrat,” for Philadelphia carried 82,349 sacks wheat, valued at
ecuted to some extent, but the close was dull at about $1.10 $64,214 ; the “ Fabius,” for Falmouth, had 20,728 6acks wheat, valued
$52,uu0 ; the ‘ Sarah Nicholson,” for Liverpool, carried 5,139 half
for prime new mixed afloat.
Private telegrams from Chicago at
and 3,600 qr. sacks flour, 24,365 sacks wheat;, the “ Tewksburyfor
report a decline to 89c. for No. 1 mixed corn in that market same, had 28,081 sacks wheat; the ‘ Ferdinand Brumra,*’ for same, car¬
to-day. Oats have materially declined, although the receipts ried 18,675 sacks wheat and 50 tons Manganese ore, valued at $43,039 ;
are
quite moderate. Bye and Barley have also declined. the “ Dawstone,” for same, had 11,128 sacRs wheat; the “ Jeddo,” for

tion of local millers is

“

Barley-malt is

scarce

Peas have declined.

and has brought full prices to arrive.
Canada $1.15@1.20 in bond, with small

sales in that range.
The

following

closing quotations:

are

Extra State

Chicago
...
per bushel

£5®11 50

Extra

W
'
Western,
to good

com¬

10 25®12 75

mon

Double Extra Western
and St. Louis
13 00@16 00
Southern supers
11 25®12 50

Southern, fancy and ex. 12 50®15
California
12 50®14
Rye Flour, fine and super¬
fine
7 50® 8
Corn meal, Jersey aud
Brandywine
5 75® 6

Sprin

1 SO® 2 3

.

...

The movement in breadstuff's at this market has been
AT

48,500

583,475

3.275

130,070
5S2.S80

Corn meal, bbls.

100,925
459,385
4, MO
11,000

:
Rye, bush
Barley, &c., busn.
FOREIGN

EXPORTS

FROM

NEW YORK

bbls.
136

Gt. Drit. week
since Jan. 1

—

N. A. Col. week..
since Jan. 1

•

•

783,525

4,375

146,210
164,935
2,192,085
51,165

249,160

9 670

387,600

551,305

92,360

885,885

bush.

Rye,

bush.

14,056

2,212

25

171

290

42,461

15,275

...»

1,845

1,615

....

1

AND

SINCE

Barley.

Cats,

Corn

bush,

bush

bush.

JAN.

76,609
116,4063,695,219
r..

...

•

Total

61,670

42,855
780,015

FOR THE WEEK

bbls.

6,515

835,538

3,000

27,02;
'

We*t Ind. week.
since Jan. 1

94,S28 49,496

Total exp’t, week
4,041
since Jan. 1, 1867 183,110
same time, 1806. 433,641
Since Jan. 1«from

....

63

2,505
37.549

68,246

131,494
500
8.302

Boston

68,525

7,732

Philadelphia

14,522

13,163

Baltimore

46,610

22,328

47,192

100

81,059

122,023 3,7S6,714
712,5892,763,468

860,217
...

2,75S
.

1,390

3,892

257,S58
4,454
1,301

..

....

2,141
559,829
638,070

Lake Ports.—The

following shows the receipts
following lake ports for the week ending June 1 :

Weekly Receipts
At. the

1,205

68,976

at

Flour.
bbls.

Wheat
bush.

25.926
4,888
4,998

93,998

68,702

5,039

73
677

1,006

...

98,300

5,639

750

1,403

29,604

Barley,
100 lbs.
62

100 lbs.

Exports, April 27 to date
Previously, from July 1, i860..

follows:

as

10.665

Flour, C. meal, Wheat,
To

1 50® 1 60

.

date, commencing
Flour,

Oats,

bbls.

1(0 lbs.
170

3,154,056

129,149

85,476

28,052
340,681

3,377,05S

129,211

£5,646

368,733

223,002
.

397

...

Wheat,

-

175
119
103

6

....

Exports of breads tuffs and grain, fiom this pert to
July 1, 1866:

-1866—
For week. S’eJan.l

1,760,775

165,595

11,206

...

38
29

....

YORK.

NEW

-1S67For week. S’eJan.l.

Flour, bbls

78®
81
S5®
87
1 08® 1 25

1 15® 1 30

Peas, Canada

RECEIPTS

1 15® ! IS
1 15® 1 IS
1 50® l 6

S.560

...

00® 1 15

Malt

10

Sacramento
...

Jersey and State
Barley

75

Montana

April 18

®

Western Yellow
v
Southern "White
Rve
Oats, Western cargoes...

50
25

April 10

2 75® 3 00
2 50® 3 10

Corn, Western Mixed

Wheat, Leather, Wool,
rolls. bales.
sks.

Flour,
bbls.’

Steamer.

§1 75® 2 40

Milwaukee Club
Red Winter
Amber do
White

Shipping R. hoop Ohio. 11 25®12 25

Shipments of breadstuff’s, etc., to New York via Isthmus, commencing
date :

November 10, 1866, to
Date.

Wheat,

Flour, Superfine..$ bbl. $S 50® 9 40

Cork, carried 10,760 sacks wheat, valued at $23,100.

Corn.
hush.
323.360

Oats.
bush.

Barley.

Rye

bush.

hush.

350

10,897

GROCERIES.
Friday Night,

June 7.

animated during the
past week. The warm weather is referred to as sufficient ex¬
cuse for less business, while the demand from the interior is
stiil light. There is, however, a good degree of confidence
observable, and with comparatively small stocks, prices are
The

Grocery trade has been rather less

quite steady.
The imports have been considerable of Rio Coffee and of
Tea, but of Sugar and Molasses, scarcely up to the average
for several previous weeks. The stock of Coffee, Sugar and
Molasses in first hands at date, compared with the stock last
year, at the same time, is as follows :
CoffVe, Rio
Coffee, other...,...
Sugar, boxes

.

1367.

1866.

I

47,874
20,591
o5,188

131,833

I

62,084
78,010

1867.
Sugar, hhds

Sugar, bug*

1 Molasses, hhds

61,922
45,056
11,445

1866.

63,573
109,589
3,760

TEA.

generally less active, but only from the general dul1.460
expected during the warmer weather. Prices are unchanged. The
12,316
9,287
158,095
Milwaukee
15.290
31,988
188,414
Toledo
reported
sales of the week from first hands include only 2,150 half
2.0S3
4,405
15,985
7,940
5,212
Detroit
67.200
425
26,260
1,600
chests Souchongs, and 1,000 do Green., The market closing dull but
22,000
1,800
Cleveland
5,493
337,241
steady.
607,275
20,609
42,824
314,021
Totals
117,271
15,574
14,1)64
424,479
51.S46
241,832
Previous week
The imports have been considerable, including parts of cargoes of
96.864
10,584
Corresponding week, 66 SO,900 754,244 1,902,358 807,999
four
vessels of direct itnpot tation ; amounting iu all to 1,800,821 lbs.,
507,387
2,343,352
407,779
..1,148.940 3,633,603 8,792,189
Since Jan. 1, 1867
283,017 501,572 composed of 32,078 lbs. Congou aud Souchong,4,300 Pouchoug, 289,469
..1.264,931 6,722,010 9,315,722 4,087,188
Same time, 1866
of Oolong, 8,324 Pekoe, 60,659 Twankay, 20,212 Hyson Skin, 162,261
California.—We have San Francisco dates to May 9th. The re¬
Hyson, 512*567 Young Hyson, 93,680 Imperial, and 117,271 Gunpowder.
ceipts of flour aod wheat for the past three years, from July 1st to Besides the above 904 pkgs. were received by steamer from Liverpool.
Hatp
l)ate- from China to April 1st give no later shipments.
Jnlyl,’66to
July 1,’65 to
July 1,’64
The following table shows the shipments of Tea from China and Japanl
May 8. ’67.
May 8, ’66. to May S,’65
Flour, qr sks
'
995,172
585,394
219,895 to the United States from June 1, 1866, to March 15, 1S67, and impor¬
Wheat, sks
4,837,553
1,965,547
424,036 tations at New York and Boston since Jan. 1.
The receipts for the week continue very considerable for the advanced
-IMP’TS ATN. Y. A BOSTON.—»
SHIPMENTS FROM CHINA AND JAPAN.
Direct Indir’ct At
season, aDd carry the total receipts of flour and wheat in sacks, of
To Atlantic ports.
To San
at New AtN. Boswheat to 5,583,932 sacks, say 9,306,500 bushels, and there is still much
Mar. 1 to
Junelto
Same FranChicago

...

..

..

258,699
32,587

Tea has become

ness

...

...

..

..

wprp •

,

%

,

to

come

forward.

days embrace 169,415
sacks

The exports of flour and wheat for the past ten
sacks and 101,318 qr. sacks wheat.
Of this quantity 44,823 qr.
flour have been eent to New York*by the “Constitution.” The advance
in the freight on flour in sacks to $3 60 does not promote

shipments in

barrels. The heat of the weather in that region is such as to shrink the
barrels out of shape and cause great waste; hence the shipments in

sacks are more desirable.
Shipments havo been made by
tion Line, in sacks, at the same rate—$3 50 per bbl., in
will not take the barrels at all. The outlet by way of the
taken off, in round numbers, 100,000 barrels
this quantity going out of the market

the Opposi¬

sacks ; that line

Isthmus has

Mar. 15.
lbs.

1,869,236

Congou & Sou
Poueheng
FekO'j

Ilvson skin

Hyson

.
.

.

in ’65, cisco,
ibs.
pkgs.

1,136,606]

53.4S5

12,078

35,944

612,477

745,004

62,108

1,533

6,833,758 6,623,794
1,600,848 1,219,934

156,453
Imperial
Gunpowder.... 151,362

1,645,653 1,527,124
5,458,983 5,862,191

Japans

ivo

8,881,409

12,078
449,349

44,800

132,084

1,693,336 1,244,511

207,624

Young Hyson.. 747,408

York.
lbs.

York.

ton.

pkg. all sorts.

HfUTOS FromG’tBriA RAg
Qg

408,163
472,033
10,857,437 9,935,319

Oolong&Ning

Twankay

Mar. 1.
lbs.

48,746

|

i4’0U0

ao

From Europe
112
From E’tlnd.

5,466,583
1,203,861
*' *
1,277,817 From oth. p’rta
4,044,094
56
17,127

since November 1st, and
Total
1,323,955 31,143,657 28,955,584 48,716 24,118,185 14,713 17,887
has given great support to prices;
COFFEE.
they are now $2@2 20 per sack, and are rather weak at that, since the
leading buyers are by no means active, and shipments by long voyages
Coffee has been fairly active for Rio, and prices show little or no
are in less lavor in view of the probable effects of the new harvest
chnDge from last week. Other kinds are inactive and rather lower. "The
upon the supplies. It also turns out to be the case that the estimate of
stocks, made some time since, was below the mark. Wheat continues sales for the week are 9,900 bags Rio within the raDge of our quota¬
to come forward fir sale at present rates in quantities beyond what was tions, and 5,952 bags Maracaibo.
The market closes to-day with a good

calculated. Thus last summer it was estimated that 200,000 tens could
be exported ; up to January 100,000 tons had been
and it was then on the best information estimated that 125,000 tons re¬
mained in the farmers hands. Since then 100,000 tons have been sent




already exported,

,

inquiry at steady prices.
The imports of the week have been considerable of Rio, including
4,727 hags per “Cappriccio,” 6,000 per “ Aitf/ia * $,300 per “ Hiterdo-

724

^

TBE CHRONICLE.

len,” 4,0C0 perMSophia,”and 4,950 per u Thessalia” At Philadelphia
8,000 bags of Rio have been received, and at Baltimore 18,867 since
our last report,
making the stock of Rio in the country in first hands
considerably above last week’s stock. Of other kinds the imports at

New York

921

were

bags Singapore, 1,801 of St. Domingo, and 2,882

bags of sundries.
The imports since January l,and stock in first hands June 4,

are

follows:

as

OF BIO COFFEE.

New York, bags
Philadelphia

Baltimore
New Orleans
Galveston
Mobile
Savannah

Stock.
47.874

271.003
10,730
102,929
52,882

“

“
“

0,350

19,500

3,200

“
“

6,000
2,6u0

Total

.448,344

At New York, At Bost.

import.
Java,
bags 21,773
5.000
Ceylon
“
Singapore,
‘
18,503
Maracaibo,
“ 17,502
Laguayra
“ 18,544
St. Domingo,“ 18,039
Other,
“ 13,175

Stock. Import.
1,041

ls.454

3,636

9'i5i

855

9,451
7.820
531

5,608

73,724

Coffee.
Duty: When imported direct in American or

equalized vessels from the place
growth of countiies this side the 03pe
in American or equalized vessels, 5 cents

of its growth or production; also, the
of Good Hope when imported
indirectly

$ B>; all other IU $ cent ad valorem in addition.
Tsva. mats and bags
Rio, prime, duty paid ...gold 1S$@ 19
gold 24$tfc 25
do good
Native Ceylon
gold l’$:g& IS
<&
do fair
Maracaibo
gold 16,@ 16f
17$@ 19
do ordinary
gold 15 (& 15*
Laguayra
17=18$
do fair to g.cargoes
St. Domingo. . .15$@ ;6
.gold lt>t@ 17
Sugar.
Duty : on raw or brown sugar, not above No. 12 Dutch standard, 8; on white
or clayed, above No. 12
and not above No. 15 Dutch standard, not refined, 8$
above J5 and not over 20,4 ; on refined,5; and on Alelado, 21 cents $ D).
Porto Rico
do
do
do 18 to 15 12 @ 12#
$ lb ii I® 12|
Cuba, inf to com. refining
do
do
do 16 to 18 13$® 1 $
9i(g> 10$
do fair to good
do 19 to 20 14$
do
do
do
is f
1(>>$@ lOi
do fair to good grocery... 11$@ 111
do
do
white
14 @ 15
do pr. to choice
do
@ 16$
llg@ 12$ Loaf....
do centrifugal
Granulated
9$@ 1;
@ 1 $
do
Melado
Crushed and powdered
6i(g* 8
@ 15$
Hav’a, Box. D. S. Nos. 7 to 9 "0 @ lOf White coffee, A
@ 14%
do
do
do 10 to 12 10$@ Ilf Yellow coffee
@14
.....

.

OTHER SORTS.

Import.

[June 8, 1867.

...

....

...

Total

116,515 20,591

36,950

..

,

SUGAR.

..

Sugar has continued in good demand for

from the trade and for

raw

refining

purposes, although prices declined $ cent
The sales are 5,950 hbds. Cuba and Porto Rico on

early in the week
a basis of 10$@10|for fair to good refining, and 4*20 boxes Havana,
partat 12fc. Refined
sugar has been in good demand, and prices close firm at 15^c. for crush¬
ed, powdered and granulated.
The imports for the week at the several
ports have been less than
for the previous week, the details are as follows:
Cuba
At—
boxes, hhds.
N. York 4,857
8,355
Portland
273
Boston
343
3,283
Philad’l.
i60
3,&50
,

Other
hhds.

,

Brazil,
bags.

2,304

Other
Cnba
boxes, hhds.
550
1,067
,

At—
Baltimore
New Orleans

....

...

63

.

'|298

Stocks June 4, and

,

/

Caba.
For'gn,
boxes. *hhds. *hhds.

Imports since Jan. 1
do
do

Philadelphia

do

Baltimore
New Orleans

do
do

Total
*

,

35,183
78,016

Portland
Boston

1,183

follows

are as

Other

'

68,573
144,617
3,817

4,883
6.307

25,714

13,649
1,118

22.068

7,243

4,056

132,697 194,870

50,509

245,379

17,107

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to

159

,

week.

Since Jan. 1.

12,440

144,.‘32
220,530
167,695

45,144

52,793
74,971

....

....

Total export
,
week.
Since Jan. 1‘.

Stocks

boxes.
468,789

61,082

755,159

36,931

656.045

523,86

80,618

779,334

424,410
0

MOLASSES.

Molasses shows

grades.

Prices

only a moderate business, chiefly for the better
essentially changed. The sales are 1,725 hhds

are not

of all kinds.

Imports of the
follows

week have been

scale.

on an average

Details

are as

:

Porto
At—
Cnba. Rico. Other.
New York... .hhds. 6,640
591 1,119

Portland
Boston

1,290
1,940

34
542

....

Porto
Cnba. Rico. Other.

At—

Philadelphia, hhds. 3,6*6

40

831

95

Baltimore
New Orleans

30

321

At

1.52,054

Portland

“

Baltimore
New Orleai

s

13,040

14,658

N.O.
bblSi
•

•

• •

79,752

6,998

29

479

29,651

1

2,729

3,441

38,442
8,730

571

48,759

488
708

39,501

1,222
1,011

28,676

175

199,634

16,796

“

“

“

“

“

.

*

are as follows:
<—P. Rico-r-Oth. Fo'gn.—, Total.
♦hhds.
♦hhds.
hhds.
2,550
75
11,440 *

29,143
42,589

“

Bostoo,
“
Philadelphia “

252

9.690

28,>-51

....

19,774

....

‘

....

236,204

,

do

Bunch

Brazil Nuts

10

11$@ 11$
28 @ 30

Filberts, Sicily

l'$@ 11$

Walnuts,

la @ U

Dried Fruit—

Dates

20$@ 2< $
@18

Almonds, Languedoc

4' @ 42

Blackberries

Provence

23}@ 24

Raspberries

Sicily, Soft Shell

50 @

@ 21$
86 @ 8a

Pared Peaches

40 @ 44

3 60

$

Citron, Leghorn

Prunes, Turkish
do

-

do
Sardines
do

Shelled

@

box

Apples

@

$ hi. box

dull.

SPICES.

to the

We

still

inactive, the principal business being iu small parcels
jobbing trade.
annex

quotations

:

Duty: 25 cents per lb.
80
1 >
do
Ex fine to finest...1 40
Y’g Hyson, Cora, to fair ... 8 >
do
Super, to flue. .1 is
do
Ex fine to finest.! 45
C unp. A Imp., Com. to fairl 00
do
Sup. to fine.1 25
do do Ex. f, to finest. I 60
...

8k* It Tw’kay* C, to flair.
U
tt*




@1 05
<Q^l 5
@1 65

@1 ; 0
<ai 40
@1 75

@1 15

@1 50
<ai 00

65 a To

f6© M

6$@ 1>

16 @ 18
...

Unpeeled do

11 @ 12
46 @ 50

29 @ 80

—Duty r aid—,

do
do Ex f. to fln'st
Uncol. Japan, Com.to fair.
do
Sup’r to flne.l
do
Kx f. to finest 1

86

90

8>) @

90

00 @1
10 @1
Oolong, Common to fair..
75 <&
do
Superior to fine... 90 @1
do
Ex fine to finest ..l £0 @1
Sous A Cong,, Com. to fair 65 @
do
Sup’r to fine. «5 <ai
do

*6

r

P. M., June 7, 1867.

The

Dry Goods trade has exhibited rather more animation
during the past week, and a generally improved tone is ob¬
servable.
The higher price of cotton and the better condition
of the market abroad, helps to give steadiness to prices here.
Added to this the prospect of abundant crops, and the proba¬
bility in that case of a good fall trade, together with the known
light stocks of goods in the interior, tends to make holders
firm. Stocks are, however, sufficiently large to keep the market
supplied at a price closely allied to a very small profit upon the
cost of production and still not so great as to cause any un¬
easiness at this usual seasou of quiet.
Domestic goods are a
little lower than last week, especially for low grades of goods.
Prime brands

steadier.

are

Woolen (roods

in

are

a

more

hopeful condition than for months past. The light production of
has enabled holders to work off the accumulated stocks,
and the kill trade will open with new goods, and it is beleived
willi new animation. Foreign goods are as usual at this sea¬
son rather quiet.
A few* lots are disposed of, but prices rule
down to about tbe actual cost of importation.
The auction
houses still offer considerable amounts, but bidding is rather
slow.
The exports of dry goods and domestics have been less
this week. The following are the details:
-FROM NSW YORK.

Liverpool

•

British W. I
New Granada

Shanghai
Turks Island
Total this week.
Since Jan. 1
Same time.1866...
“

05
20
85
?0
6>
76

16
to

*

.

.

•

.

•

British Provinces..

“

Val.

2

•

*

.

•

a

.

...

•

•

•

.

.

•

.

.

•

....

•

....

2

4,139
2,115

few

•

.

.

•

•

$395
675,770
834,876

I860.... 43,625

We annex
manufacture:

packages.

$395

»

—FROM BOSTON

Yal.

pkgs.

Brown Sheetings

Duty pa’d—s

Hyson, Common to fair
do
Superior to flue.... 1

@ 12

Cherries, pitted, new....

5 rid ay,

Exports to

are

are

$ lb

...

THE DRY GOODS TRADE.

Brazil

dull, and although without essential change in prices
there is a downward
tendency. Considerable sales of layer raisins are
reported at $3.65@3.70. In other kinds business is light. Foreign
green fruits are less abundant, and prices are better.
Domestic dried
Spices

.►

Fruit.

Domestics.

FRUITS.

are

21*
19$

Raisins, Currauts, Figs, Plums and Prunes,5; Shelled Almonds,
Almonds, 6; other nuts,2; Dates, 2; Pea Nuts, 1; Shelled do, 1$, Filbert? and
Walnuts, 3 cents 38 lb; Sardines, 50; Preserved Ginger, 50; Green Fruits, 25
$ cent ad val.
Sardines..
Raisins, Seedless.. $ fcask 8 50 @
# qr. box
1 $@ 18$
do Layer
$ box
@3 70 Figs,Smyrna....go d 3?
24 @ 26

9,281

Includes barrels and tierces reduced to hogsheads.

Fbuit8

21$@
19 @
27 @

the year

Stocks, June 4, and imports since January 1
Cnba.
♦hhds.

and

hogsheads.

Expts to U. S.—,

week.

*

pepper

Duty:

do

will show the receipts, exports and stocks at Havana

Rec'd this
Year.

(gold)

1 $ I Pimento, Jamaica, (gold)
8
I Cloves
(gold)
85 |

13 @
8 $@
82$@

a

1867
1866
1865

and doves, 20;

.

Havana, June 1.—Sugar has continued active with large sales for
the week. The closing
price is
re. Per arrobe for No. 12 with

firm market.
The following
and M&tanzas:

-.5 @ 62

~

Spices.

Ginger, race and Af(gold)
Mace
(gold)
Nutmegs, No,l....(gold)

41,890

54,699

47 @ *9

do Clayed.....^*-..
Barbados

..

c-

Currants

109,5S9
13,051 54,540

23,385
1,107

.

@
5 @ 70
<8 @ 58
.

Duty: mace, 40 cents; nutmegs, 50; cassia
pimento, 15 ; and ginger root, 5 cents 38 flt>.
Cassia, in mats gold^Mb
42 @
I Pepper,

•

,

45,056

75,104 121,232
1,078
2,740
23,652 20,831
11,878 35.523
7,2:39
8,419
13,746
6,125

.

import

Brazil, Manila.
bags. bags,«fcc

Total
♦hhds.
61.922

$ gallon.
$ gall.

hhds.

...

imports since January 1,

At—
N. York stock.
Same date 1866

sorts,

,

Molasses*
Duty : 8 cents
New Orleans
Porto Rico
Cuba Muscovado

,

Pkgs.
$....

.

3

1,778

1

163

7

1,217

,

,

,

....

,

.

,

•

•

.

•

•

•

....

47
5
31

•

....

11

$3,158

83

2,977

647,495

1,813

587,376

3,262
1,5^9
22,444

....

caees.

....

particulars of leading articles of domestic
and

Shirtings

are

in onlv

light demand, but

are more steady for standard makes.
Atlantic N 8 4 10^, Law¬
rence H 12^, Indian Orchard L do 12$, Commonwealth O do 9, Union
do 10, Boott H do 12, Pepperell N dc 13$, Indian Head do 14$, At¬
lantic V 7-8 14^, Atlantic E do 15, Pacific E do 15, Tremont E do Hi,
Bedford R do 11, Boott O do 13$, Indian Orchard W do 18$, Law¬
rence G do 13$, Pepperell O do 15, Indian Head 4-4 18, Pacific ex¬

prices

tra do

17$, do H do 17$, do L do 16, Atlantic H do 17$, do A do 18,

do L do 16, IA*rfcncp E do 16$. do F do 16, Stark Ado
A 4© !7$* do g 4© 17, Ki&iibtjsk do 10$, Rokburfr A

17, Amotkaag

do 16, Xfidlftfi

June

Pepperell E do 18, Great Falla M dc 14$, do S
do 13$, Albion do 12$, Dwight W do 14$, Pepperell R do 16, Macon
do 17, Shannon do 14$, Laconia O 9-8 17, Pequot do 22, Indian Or¬
chard A 40 inch do 17$, do O 15$, Nashua 5-4 28, Naumkeag W do
23, Utica do 40, Utica 7-4 45, Pepperell 9-4 40, Pepperell 10-4 50,

Orchard B B do 14$,

Utica 11-4 80.

steady for prime brands*

light demand prevails among Jobbing houses. Globe 3-4 9$, King*
do 9, Boott R do 11, do H do 12, Strafford B do 13, Waltham X

a

stun

15, Putnam B do 12. Amosbeag Z do 13, Great Falla M do 14$,
do S do 18$, do A do 15$, do J do 16$, Lyman Cambric do 16$, Straf
ord M do 14, Lawrence A do 18$, Hill’s Semp Idem, do 20, Boot 0 do

Bartlett 31 inch 15$, Greene G 4-4 12$, Newmarket A do 15,
Great Falls K do 15$, Bartletts do 19, James Steam do 19,
Indian River XX do 13$, Attawaugan XX do 15$, Lawrence B do
16, Tip Top do 21$, Blackstone A A do 15, Amoskeag A do 22$,
Boot B do 18$, Forestdtile do 20, Masonville do 22$ do XX do 24,
Androscoggin L do 22$, Lonsdale do 22$, Wauregan do 22$, Bates XX
do 25, Arkwright do 23$, Lymau J do 22$, Wamsutta H do 82$, do
0 do 82$, Atlantic Cambric do 29, New York Mills do 40, Hill do 22,
Amoskeag 42 inch 24, Waltham do 20, Wamsutta 9-8 87$, Naumkeag
W 6-4 20, Boot W do 20, Bates do 27, Wamsutta do 42$, Amoskeag
46 inch 27, Waltham 6-4 27$. Mattawamkeag do 27$, Pepperell do
82$, Allendale do 30. Utica do 42$, Waltham 8-4 37$, Pepperell
do 40, Allendale do 37$, Mattawamkeag 9-4 40, Pepperell do 50,
Utica do 72$, Allendale do 47$, Monadnock 10-4 45, Waltham do 55,
Allendale do 57$, Pepperell do 60, Utica do 77$, Massabesic 11-4 60,
Amoskeag do 76, Pepperell do 72$.
Ticks are also but .little changed from last week.
Amoskeag A
C A 46,uo A 86, do B 81, do D 21, do C 26, Brunswick 17$, Blackstone River 17, Hamilton 30, Somerset 14, Thorndike 18, Pearl River
42$, Pittsfield 10$, York 41, do 81, Cordis A A A 31$, Duck A A
27$, Everett 21, Boston A A 27$ Swift River 17$, Eagle 4-4 30-24,
Albany 10$.
Stripes are inactive and lower.
Amoskeag 25$ and 26$, Uncasville 16$ and 17$, Whittenton A A 25, do A 3-3 22$, do B B 18, do
C 16, Pittsfield 3-3 10$, Pemberton Awn 37$, Haymaker 16 and 17,
Everett 16 and 17, Massabesic 6-3 25$, Boston 14$ and 15$, American
14 $ and 15, Eagle 12$ and 13$, Hamilton 25, Jewett City 13$ and 14$,
15,

do C do 17,

The

4x2

follows

dull and nominal.
Park Mills Red 20, Union, 50
80, do 50 2x2 30, do 20 4-2 27$, do 20 2-2 27$, Caledonia 15 inch

Kennebeck 26$, Wamsutta 24, Star No. 600 15$, do
No. 800 2x2 20$, do No 900 4-2 24.
Denims are inquired for for home trade.
Amoskeag 35, Haymaker
28 inch 16, do brown 15, York 28 inch 80, Warren brown 27 inch 15,
Boston Mfg. Co. 29 inch 13$, Pearl River 30, Union 16, Monitor 15,
Manchester Co. 20, Arlington 18, Blue Hill 12$, Otis A X A 27$, do B
B 25, Mount Vernon 25, Pawnee 11$.
Brown Drills are in only light request
Winthrop 14$, Amoskeag
18, Pepperell 19, do fine jean 20, Stark A 18$, Massabesic 16, Wood¬
ward duck bag 26$, National bags 81, Stark A do 57$, Liberty do 31.

Print Cloths have been more active, as printers are now stocking
their mills for Fall work, and with the higher price of cotton, prices have
advanced $@$ cent.
Prints are in fair request among jobbers for special styles for both the
Prices are not essentially changed. Ameri¬
interior and home trade.

15, Amoskeag dark 14, do

purple 16$, do shirting 14$, do palm

leaf 16, Merrimac D dark 15 tfc 16$, do purple 17, do W dark 18 <fc 19,
do purple 19, do pink 19, Sprague’s 15$ do purple 16, do
do pink 16, do turk’y red 15$, do blue check 16, do solid 14$, do
blue 15$, Loudon Mourning 14$, Simpson Mourning 14$, Amoskeag

shirting 16$,
indigo

Mourning 14, Dunnell’s 15, Alleu pink 16, Arnolds 12$, Gloucester 16,
Wamsutta 11$, Pacific 15$, Cocheco 16, Lowell 12.$, Naumkeag 12,
Hamilton 15, Victory 12$, Home 10$, Empire State 9, Wauregan
light 12$, Hovey 8$, Troy 9$.
Lawns and Ginghams are in rather better request.
Pacific Lawns
No. 1,400 sell at 2*2$, do do no No. 20, plaiu black and colors 18 to 25,
and Manchester Chambrays at 24 for B, 26$ for C, 28$ for D, 33$ for
E, and F 38. Lancaster Ginghams 23, Hartford 17, Hampden 19, Glas¬
gow 20, Clyde 12$, Berkshire 18, Roanoke 12, Bates 21, Manchester 15.
Canton Flannels are inactive and quite nomiual at this time. La
conia Bro. 28, Rockland do 12$, Naumkeag do 25, Nashua A 20, Extra
Plush 22$.
Corset

:

Jeans

are

in

light

request at steady prices.

Andros¬

coggin 12$, Bates colored 12$, do bleached 12$, Naumkeag 18, Pepperel 20, Naumkeag satteen 21, Laconia 18, Indian Orchard 16$, Rockport
18$, Ward 17.
Cambrics and Silesias are in some demand.
Washington cambrics
sell at 12 cents, Victory 10$, do A 13, do high colors 14, Fox Hill
10$, Superior 9$, Pequot 11$, Waverly 11$, S. S. & Sons paper
cambrics at 15$, do high colors 18$, White Rock 15, Mason ville 15$,
and Indian Orchard Silesias 19, Ward do at 19.
Muslin Delaines are unchanged with a light demand. Lowell 20,
Hamilton Co. 23, Manchester dark 20, Pacific dark 20, Armures'dark
28, High colors 28, Pacific Merinos 40, Mourning 23, Shepherd checks
20, Spragues 19, Skirtmgs 80.
Linseys are inactive at this time. Westerly, 82$, Park 45 inch 32$
do 60 do 37$, do 65 do 42$, Miners’ Flannel 35 and 40, Rob Roy 24,
White Rock 31$, Black Rock 32$.
Cottonade8

are

also in very

small demand, but without change in

Farmer’s and Mechanics’ Cassimeres 45,
Rodman’s Kentucky Jean 47$, Plow, L. & Anvil

price.

New York Mills 57$, Whittenden d&t 27$.
Carpets are inactive at previous prices.

Total

PembertoQ d<tt 42$
38, York 25 to 32$,
'

Velvets, J. Crossley’s best

qual. 8 35, do patent 2 85; body Brussels, Roxbury 2 75,
do Bigelow 2 60 ; Tapestry. Brussels, G. Croseley 1 80, Lowell, ex. 3 p
2 00, do super 1 65, do med sup 1 40, Hartford Carp. Co, ex. 3-ply 2 05,
do Imp. 8-ply 1 95, do superfine 155, Med. and low pri. Ingrain 1(3)1 30
American Linen is in fair demand at steady rates.

1867.
Value
Pkgs.
373
$158,582
,

111,677
108,271
93,362

240
284

48,257

42,718

2,354

/2,576 $1,693,679

1,167

$504,071

112

INTO THE

WAREHOUSE AND THROWN

FROM

WITHDRAWN

6 1867.

JUNE

1866.
«
Pkgs. Value.
308
$148,043
364
117
273
105

Miscellaneous dry gooas.

75,4*3

175,919
74,589
55,998

292

$540,551

3,543
MARKET

DUBCK*

THE SAME PERIOD.

do

Total
Add ent’d

$254,491
504,071

1,312
3,543

$415,717
540,551

$758,562

4,855

$956,268

58
146
375

64,266
31,602

$398,485
1,093 679

1,003
1,167

mak’t 3,701 $1,492,164

2,168

silk
flax

698
151

$221,057

49

42,996

297
100

69,448
13,909

....

....

dry goods

.

51,075

l,i:5

forconsumpt’n2,576

Total thrownxpon

$130,758

$104,903
45,727

cotton..

do
do
Miscellaneous

314
249
137
284
528

287
137

Manufactures of wool...

7,993

6

21
170
3

....

....

Total
Add ent’d lor

144
62
8
33
232

$64,003
2,652

156

Manufactures of wool...
do
cotton..
do
silk
do
flax
Miscellaneous dry goods.

15,152
35,486

2,070

8,842
9,541

$119,363

479

1,093,679

1,167

Total entered at the port 2,932 $1,213,042

$238,699

221
34
233

78,815
32,171
61,528

8,001

58,650

9,019
3,543

$469,863

22,597
6,035

356

.

—

530

$60,288

conaumpt’n 2,576

$107,303
504,071

$611,374

1,643

77,427
138,591
57,308
11,633

SAME PERIOD.

ENTERED FOR WAREHOUSING DURING THE

510,551

12,562 $1,010,414

IMPORTS

(OTHER THAN DRY GOODS AND
WEEK

SPECIE) AT THE PORT OF NEW YORK FOR THE
MAY

ENDING

31, 1867.

[The quantity is given in packages when not
Instruments—

China, Glass & E.

Musical

ware—

Bottles
China
118
Earth’nw’e .905
Glass
1,917
Glassware.. .1^9
Glass plate..203
.

Drugs, &c.—
Alkali
13
Acids
.12
Ammonia sal...
Anoline
Annatto
Alumn cake....
Alum

1,909 Nautical..
5,699 Optical
35,259 Jewelry. &c.—
4,903 Jewelry
9.405

32,991
2,197

1,922
656
328

10,986

200

2,011
7,258

Blea powd..
Brimstone,

.650

.449
Carmine
2
Cream tartar 20
tons......

11.429

Cudbear

2

295

chors

Dragon blood...

776

Copper

Gambier.. ..3697

32,309

Cutlery

Gums, crude.702

14,065

5

Paints
Pans white...31
Potass chlo.. .16
do
muir 142
do
Bis....15

sal ..,.500

do
do

ash....649
caustic .98

Sponges

38

Sumac.... ...350

Tonqua, cans.13
Vermillion ...13

Verdigris

5

Other

Furs, &c—
Felting
Furs

..

Bananas
Dried fruit
Lemons
Nuts

Oranges
Presv’d

ginger..

Pineapples

Prunes
Raisins
Sauces and pre¬
serves

tons

1,063

4,269
24,131
2,132

21,260
394

15

998

26

1,142
14,432

9,463
28,646

5,633

7524

39,013

8772

tons

Iron, sheet,
tons
*111
Iron, tnbes... 3
Iron, other,
•

37,423
6575

456

615

25,513

....2

246

3
12

1,419
7,389
2,988
1,577
273

tons

Nails

Needles
Nickel

Old metal
Platiua
2
Plated ware...l
Per. caps
12

13

Saddlery

4,754
2,887 Tin, bxs...8,091
do slabs, 2,107
344
214,627
701
9
1,411 Wire
4,505 SpiceB, &c.—
Ginger

2,537

340

Iron, RR

155

6,260
57,861
2,417
28,318
276
485
1,9 <12

Steel

1,736
Coffee,bgs.39,387 646,461
Cocoa, bgs..525 11,257
Emery
50
462
Fancy goods.... 61,124
Flax
18
2,523
1.481

Fish
Flonr
Grain
G unny cloth. 369
Guano
121
Hair
Haircloth
3

14,000
47,416

8,189
46,863
20,754
1,487

6440 141,554
170 6,768

Hemp
Honey

India rubberl560 159,070

3,327
28,281

41
Ivory
Machinery.. .586
Marble &

man.

do
Molasses ...8372

Onions
Oil paintings.

4,412
225,263
2,939

3,170
404

.9
Paper hang....3

1,027
8,218

Plaster

Perfumery... .13
Pipes

9,998
9,821

Potatoes

316

Provisions

Statuary
Sago

1,254

17,012
1,099

5,978 Stationery, <®c.—
696 Books .......98 14,795
799
Engravings... .3
’ 16,312
235 15,402
25,325 Paper
60 12,875
22,372 Other
-

2,243
645

2,129

1688 54,687

Salt

Seeds
Linseed

6,0*22
246

1,812
...

2,739
28,980

4825

584

2
Soap
."
Sugar, hhds,bb s
&tcs

...

1,039 996,345

bxs. &
4171 77,099
Tapioca
90
672
Sugar,
bgs

Trees &
Tea

Toys

plants..
191
23,175 288,090

Tobacco
Tomatoes
Waste

£62 11,368
661

18,96 H
1,186

38

1,526

Wool, bales.2002 211,734
Other
1,174
-

7,050

Total..

Our

6,237

32,430

1,302

.1467

Corks
Clocks

1,552

34,975

lbs

29

3,193

Pepper

Logwood, M.

Cheese

Rope

122

5,102

655
882
1,274
9,161
6,514

Clay

Rvee

2,599

Lignum Vita...

16,593

55,864

81,746

Nutmeg

Woods—
Cork
Fnstic

216
73

Rags

Mace

Pimento

134

4,991
1,317

3,43?
1,696

743

4,910
31,763

845

6,190
5,025

Buildii.g stones.

16

Ill

tons

Iron, Pig,

18,460

9,691

Japan wood....

957
3,019

Iron, hoop,

329

1,327

2,716
16,048

1,351

2

Guns
94
Hardware.... 166

34,259
1,532

.149 102,741

Hat, goods &c .1
Fruits, &c.' -

2,624

Rattan
Rosewood

Cigars
Coal, ton8..2833

4.887

Chains & an¬

784

Quinine
20 1,971
shellac
358 10,012
Soda, bicrb. 1550
6,114
do

775

3

Bronzes

296

1,346

Opium

1.552

1048
1,159 Wines
3,976 Metais, <fec.—

8

20

5

Whiskey

16

Oils ess
33
do linseed..666

14,179

532
150
100
83

Ale..
Beer
Porter
Rum

Cochineal

Magnesia

Pkgs. Value

Mahogany

Palm leaf
9 22,461 Other...
Watches
21 45,556 MiscellaneousAlabaster busts.
Leather, Hides, «fcc.
Baskets
89
Bristles
82 16,288
213
Boots & shoes. 1
Bags
bricks
Hides, dress¬
Boxes
155 75,465
ed
Buttons
70
Hides, undress¬

Chickory

Glue
7
Indigo
150
Lac Dye
26
17
Leeches
Lie paste....500

Ill
1

ed
164,895
2,203
5,297
693 Patent leatherll
Wines, <fcc.—
iqu
1,012 Liquors,

Bark^Peruv.. 695

Barytes.

otherwise specified.]

Pkgs. Value.

Pkgs. Value

$3 60, do A1




THE WEEK ENDING

1865.
s
Value.
Pkgs.
Manufactures of wool... 871
$343,765
444
do
cotton..
119,311
381
do
silk...
39?,2 0
do
flax.... 768
185,146
/

are

28, do 11 inch 22,

can

importations of dry goods at this port for the week ending June
corresponding weeks of 1865 and 1866, have been as

6, 1867, and the

Sheridan G 14.
Checks

NEW YORK.

IMPORTATIONS OF DRY GOODS AT THE PORT OF

ENTERED FOB CONSUMPTION FOR

Bleached Sheetings and Shirtings are

and

725

THE CHRONICLE.

8,1867.]

General Prleea Current will
73* and 733.

.$4,718,148

be found on page*

THE CHRONICLE.

726

Railtuatj JItonitor.

)t

[June 8,1867.

This road has

.

main line of 388 miles, and branches of 119

a

miles,

making a total length of 507 miles. The
road consists of 132 broad and 18
narrow-gauge

equipment of the
locomotives
; and
Atlantic and Great Western Railway.—The following is a
the following cars : 87 passenger, 7 sleeping, 6 smoking, 1
superin¬
comparative statement of the earnings and operating expenses of tendent’s, 2 paymaster’s,
34 baggage, 9 express, 3 post-office, 59 ca¬
this road for the ten months ending October 31. 1865 and 1866 :
boose, 821 box, 849 open, 1,471 coal and platform, 4 boarding, and
ISIS.
1806.
Increase.
Decrease.
8 wrecking cars. Of these, 6 passenger, 3 baggage, and 756
Earnings
$4,014,7-27 3$ $1,803,480 SO *0IS,702 43
$
freight
Expenses
2,804,474 38
3,522,400 23
717,9S5 85
and other

........

Balance

The

1866

$1,810,253 00

earnings and

were as

for the whole

year

of 1865 and

lSCO^

Increase.

$5,000,110 32
4,210,881 51

Decrease.
$120,215 80

524,84S 51

expenses, etc.,
follows :
1805.

$5,S25,335 18
3,080,033 CO

Earnings
Expenses
Balance

$2,139,302 18

The per centage

of working

60.8, and of 1866, 72.8
1866, 73.9.
was

;

$100,223 37

$1,311,029 03

$1,485,237 81

of the

guage. The miles run in 10 months
by locomotives 2,656,764,'cars hauled one mile 29,857,318.
The general account as of the 3lst October, 1866, gives the fol¬
lowing1 summary of the financial condition of the company :
cars are

in 1866

General

I

shares.$27,645,405 20

.......

Less, in

$

$054,004 37

expenses lor the ten months of 1865
for the whole year 1865. 63 3, and of

trust..

1,800,000 00.

The

Passengers carried
Tons of Freight carried

1805.

I860.

$847,008
831,959

$742,077
1,198,537

Increase.
$

Decrease.

$105,531

:
revenue

Total

The miles travelled

by passengers in 1866 were 33,790,988 at
1.50 cents per mile. The tons of freight carried one mile was 125,286,364 at 2.87 cents per ton per mile. The average rates in 1865
were, per passenger per mile, 1.52 cents, and per ton per mile, 3.70
cents.
The earnings from these severally, for the ten months, com¬
pare as follows:
Passengers

Freight
Had the

1S65.

I860.

$1,291,470 61
3,083,320 11

$1,112,517 80
3,437,897 25

Increase.
$

Decrease-

$178,959 31

351,577 14

freight rates of Ib65 been retained in 1866

million

a

additional would have been earned.

-Atlantic & Great Western.
1866.

(466 m.)
$289,400

(507 m.)

$504,992
327,269
408,864
388,480
899,870
343,408
394,533
399,364
451,477
474,4-11
429,669
472,483
590,583
540,537
587,121

462,674

614,849
475,723

497,250
368,581

6,548,359
Erie
1865.

(798 m.)

$361,137. .Jan—
377,852. .Feb
—

438,040 .March
443,029. April..

May...
J n tie..
.July...
Aug...
.Sept...
.

528,018
520,959
541,491

Oci
.Nov
.Dec

Railway.
I860

1867.

(798 m.)

<775 in.)

987,936
1,070,917
1,153,441
1,101,632
1,243,636
1,208,244
1,295,400

..

.July.,
...Aug
.

1,416,101

...Sep...

,470.24-4

...Oct...
...Nov.,
...Dec...

1865.

$363,996
366,361
413,974
865,180
851,489
387,095
301,613
418,575

1866.

412,393

409,427
426,493
392,641

338,499

486,808

380,452
429,191

524,760
495,072
351,799

500,404
416,690
339,417

4,826,Ti2

4,652,793

r-Pittsb.. Et.W., A
1865.

1866.

712,495
795,938
858,500

712,362
680,963

648,201
654,926

757,441
679,935
555,222

8,489,062 7,407,21$




567,679

518,088

7,181,208

6,546,741
1866.

(2.34 in.)
$121,776

70,740
106,689

...May...

146.5)43

..June..

224,838

...July...
...Aug*..
....Sep...

217,159
170,555

72,135
108,082
207,488
262,172
170,795

.

.

—

—

—

—

—

—

—

226,840

...Dec...

110,664

..Year..

678,349 ...Mar...
575,287 ..April..
...May..
—

..June,.

July.
Aug..
-.Sept

,

—

—

-

-

.
.
.

..Oct....
Nov....
Dec....

^
—

—

.

.

.

.

767,508
946,707
923,886
840, &54

.Oct...
.Nov..
.Dec..

546,609

..Year

•iTear..

84.897

7,960,981

1867.

1865.

(708 m.)
Jan.
554.2U1.
Feb.
417,352. .Mar..
4-20 007.. April.

$96,672
87,791
93,763
78,607

.May
J

76,248

107,525
104,608
115,184
125,252
116,495

une.

uly.
Aug..
..Sep..

.J

..Oct..

1,943,900
I860.

(210 m.) (210 m.)
$170,078 $178,119
15)3.903
155, S93
202,771

109,299
177,025
173,722
102,570
218,236

216,783
222,924

208,098
162,694
,240,744

192,1)38
167.301

2,251,525

.Jan..
.Feb..
.. .Mar.,

April.

..

•

•

$90,125

July

244,121
306,231
3S9,489
307,523
270,073
201,779

.

.Aug...
Sep..,
.Oct..,
.Nov...

.Dec..,

78,976.. .Feb..
84,652.. .Mar..
—

..July.
..Aug..
Sep..

—

108,338

1,186, SOS

.June.

—

—

1865.

..

—

..June

—

—

—

.

...July...
...Aug...
....Sep...
....Oct....
...Nov.,.

...Dcc._
Hear..

—

.

(234 m.)
$98,181
86,523

1866.
(275 m.)

2)37,562
251,906

$131,707
123,404
123,957
121,533
245,622
244,376
208,785

241,370

188,815

7300,841

S395,579

276,416
416,359

£ 346,717

328,539

«171,125

129,287

95,905

106,269
203,018

2,535,001

2,538,800

..

..Oct..
.Nov..
.Dec..

—

1867.

1865.

149.312.. .Feb...
174.152.. Mar..,
.

.April.
..May..

139,171
155,753
14-1,001
138 738

June.

194,521
July. f 271,798
i374.534
-Aug..
.Sept.. ”379,981
.Oct...., sj 375,5)34
Nov:.., 7361,610
.

.

131,900...Mar..
192,548.. April,
...May..
—

..June.

—

...July
...Aug.

—

—

....Sep.

—

....Oct.
...Nov.

—

—

...Dec.,.

—

4

•

Year

..

.

...Jan...
...Feb...
..Mar...
.

..

..

April..
May...
June..

July..
..Aug...
Sept....
.

.

..Oct

314,830

..Nov...,.

^Year««. 8,926,678

8,694,975

..Dee
-

(285 m.)

$282,438
265,796
3? r,158
3 ,3,736
&<5,196
335,082
324,986
359,665
429,166
493.649
414,604
308.649

Ohio A

1867.

(285 m.)

$304,095
283,661
375.210

362,783

Mississippi.
1866.

1S67.

2)39,139
313,914
271,527
290,916
304,463
349,285
344,700
350,348
372,618
412,553
284,319

(340 m.)

$242,793

246,109
326,236

277,423
283,130
253,924
247,262
305,454
278,701
310,762
302,425
281,613

3,793,005 3,880,683
1865.

436,065

264,741

Dec...,

-

219,065
279,647

284,729

-

-Western Union. -

317,052

396,2-48
349,117

(.247,023

.

(484 m.)
$237,674
200,793
270,630

325 691

1866.

(285 m.)

$259,223 $267,641

130,000... Feb.

304,917

1865.

(340 m.) (3^0 m.)

A Western.1867.
1866..

(484 m.)
$256,059
194,167
250,407
270,300
316,433

£.339,447

1865.

(370 m.)
$146,800.. .Jan.

r-Toledo, Wab.

(210 m.)
(242 in.)
$149,658.. .Jan... $144.08-4

S 422 124
” 331,006

4,504,546 4,260,125
i

1867.

—

224,1;2
310,443
"7396,050

328.869

—

.

184,497
25'.,507
280,28?

290.642

<

279,15
344,228
337,240
401,456
365,663
-329,105
413,501
460,661
490,693
447,669

72,768.. April.
..May..
—

$267,626

Michigan Central.

(251 m.)
$94,136., .Jan..

82,910
82,722
95,064
100,315
90,02)1
106,410

1897.

(423 m.)

3,313,514 3,478,325

1867.

84,264

1866.

321,818

«

-Milwaukee & St. Paul.-

—

-

1865.

(228 m.) (23S tn.)
$305,554 $241,395
246,331
183,385
289,403
257,230
196,580
197,886
234,612
264,605

..Year..

—

1866.

1,222,017

87,510.. April..
...May...

177,364

9,088,994

..Year*,.

72.000...Mar

198,884
244,834
212,226

r-Chic-, Rock Is. and Pacific. -

1867.

(930 7/i.)(1,032 in.)
$523,506 $690 882
405,6)44 586,743
523,744 747,392
518,73G 720,651
735,062
922,892
77 o,990
778,284
989,053
1,210,654
1,005,680
698,679

.Dec..

(234 in.)
$143,000. ..Jan...
85,000... Feb...

222,953

RAILROADS.

1 cur

1800.

116,146
105,767

v..

1867.

168,699
167,099
160,015

1 ciiit

150,148
110,932
111,665

.No

—

$29,940,900

Ogdensburg Railroad.—A
party, consist¬

(251 in.) (251 m.)

$660,438.

116,224
150,989

245,7«'1
.244,854
98,787

Total

Marietta and Cincinnati.—<.

L., Alton A T. Haute.

1865.

522,821 ...Feb...

—

1,985,712
<—St.

1867.

—

228,020
310.594

....Oct....
...Nov...

(468 m.)
$560,115. ..Jan...

—

2>3,951. .April.
..May..

571.348
661.971

(2)34 in.)
$98,183
74,28)3

—

(800 in.)
$541,005
482,164
499,296
468,358
585,623

142,947
Feb.
238.862. ..Mar.,

480,626
573,253
538,219
504,066

1865.

Chicago.-

(468 m.) (468 m.)
$690,144 $559,982
678,504
480,986
662 163
857,583
699,806
733,866
687,186
682,510
646,995
633,667
584,523
552,378

617,682
578,403
747,469
739,736

(524 m.)
*302,714.,* fan.
302,437. .Feb..
379,761
Mar...
391,163.. April..
—

1865

Mil. and Prairie du Chien.—.

1867.

(524 m.)
$314,598
28)3,179

569,250

641,589

Mich. So. A N. Indiana.(524 m.)

460.573

648.887

Year

.

1866.

516,608

528,972

..June..

6,501,063 14,596,413

~t vitx

387,269
322,038
360,823
323,030
271,240

12,895,000—17,105,000

349,000 :

PRINCIPAL

747.942

616,665

.

OE

702,692

(70S m.)
$603,053
505,266
605,465
411,605

and

mort.... $30,000,000

Lees in trust...

wilderness until late in the Fall.

July
..Aiig..
...Sep..

1865.

is stated at the following des¬

Chicago & Northwestern-

321,597

$64,623,052 22

ing of ten civil engineers, in charge of A. M. Peak, left Albany a
few days ago for the north woods. They are in the
employ of the
State, and entrusted with the survey of the Schenectady and Og¬
densburg Railroad route. This work will detain them in the north¬

.June.

(70S m.)
$571,536

1,217,143 ..April.
...May

1,524,917£ 1,041,115

Schenectady

1807.

—

Total.....

| Canal

757,500

..

ion

3,840,091 3,095,152

|

$SS0,000 I Less in trust .77r’~$59,600^$3708L900
701,nOl) I 2d mortgage (Ohio Div.)..
2,653,000
14,0)0 j let mortgage (Buffalo Ext.)
1,382,000
2.151,500 j 1st
do
(Silv. Cr. Br.)
200,00J

..

City R.R. bds.

371.543

307,919
236,824

do

2d
do
do
do
Eastern coal fields branch
bonds
1st mort. (Ohio
Division
$3,740,900

Illinois Central.-

Jan
917,039 ...Feb..
1,139,528 ...Mar..

$906,759

1,416,001

#

...

do

(280 m.)
$240,238. ..Jan..

355,270
335,985
409,250
401,280

.

Penn. & Ohio
canal stock
20,022 45—
103,370 77
| Interest on
bonds
I
1 229,500 60
$04,623,052 22 | Sinking fund. 439,117 83— 1,66S,619 43

mortgage (Penn. Div.).

1st

EARNINGS

1866.

29,840,900 00
1,150,819 15
3,370,507 75
12,863 59
2,372,150 47

:
let mortgage (N. Y. Div.)..

(280 in.) (280 m.)
$280,503 $226,152
275,282
222,241
290,111
299,003
269,249
258,480
322,277
329,851

357,950

Year..

5,476,276 3,050,340

$1,070,890 $1,185,740
1,011,735
1,331,124
1,538,313
1,425,120
1,252,370
1,274,558
1,418,742
1,435,285

1865.

(507 in.)

Bills and accouni s
Real estate
$83,348 32

criptions and amounts

—Chicago and Alton.—

186.1

1865.

MONTHLY

1,314,687 45
740,' 43 73
4,279,035 96

Material a-d supplies..

The bonded debt of the
company

ern

COMPARATIVE

159,730 19

trustees

!

2d
do
Erie & N. Y.

300,578

I

1,919,000 00

are

.

$56,357,560 15

$25,S45,405 20 I Cash with bankers and

Unpaid coupons
Sundries...

Property

| Cash with Treasurer

Preferred shares
Bonds
Bills and accounts

Balance and net

report covers only ten months—the returns for the fall year
supplementary.
The passengers and freight carried in the first ten months of the
years 1865 and 1866 compare as follows :

narrow

~Year..

1866.

(157 m.)
$43,716
37,265
32,378
33,972

45,102
86,006
89,299
43,333
63^863 s. 86,9:3
82,147 102,686
68,180
85,508
50,862
6u,bUS
75,677
84,402
92,715 100,308
61,770
75,248
37,830
64,478

689,888

.

1867.

(177 m) (1T7 m.)

814,081

$39,079
27.666

36,392
40,710

June

8. 1867.]

the
name,
and
page of Chronicle containing
List report. * means “ leased "

Hf. B.

The figures after
refer to the vol.

Periods.

standing.

Last
Date,

Lawrence*

and Ohio
Washington Branch*
Bellefontame Line
Belvidere, Delaware

Baltimore

153,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’67

Central Ohio
do

50

Co.100

100

4,666,800
13,000,000

i

2.600.00a

preferred

.100 124,550
3*29.. 100 3,886,500
do
preferred.. 100 2,425, i-00
10,193.010
Chic.Bnr. and Quincy, 3, p 261.100
4,390,000
Chicago and Great Eastern.. .100 1,000,000
Chicago, Iowa & Nebraska*.. .100 2,227,000
Chicago and Milwaukee* ....100
13,160,927
Chicago and Northwestern .. .100 12,994.719
Cheshire (preferred)
Chicago and Alton, 4, p.

Quarterly.
April.
Sep.
Sep.

Mar &
Mar &

3

Jan. A
•Jan. &

50

1*
2*
13*
4
5
5
5
5

Jin. ’67
Feb. ’67
Feb. ’67

12SK 129

50
100
50

Delaware*
Delaware, Lacka., A Western 50
Des Moines Valley
100
Detroit and Milwaukee
10O
do
do
pref. ..100

Eastern,

(Mass)

East Tennessee
East Tennessee

Elmira and

100

City

pref. ..100

Jan. ’67

Apr. ’07

5

2*

lie*

Apr. ’67 6
Apr. ’67 2*
Mar. '67
Mar. ’67

5
5
5

109*
112
131
11

100

Williamsport*.. . 50
do
pref. 50

•

110

*

88

*

66*
100
61

•

...

4

’67 ’7”
’67 3

25
60

25*
68

97
....

Whitehall.... 100
Troy, Salem & Rutland
100
Richmond and Dan.. 4, p.45 ‘«.100
Richmond & Petersb., 1, p.488. lOU
Rome, Watert. A Ogdensb’g..l00
Rutland and Burlington
100
St. Louis, Alton, & Terre H.. .100
do
do
pref.100
St. Louis, Jacksonv. & Chic.*100
Sandusky, and Cincinnati
50
do
do
pref. 50
Sandusky, Mansf. & Newark.100
Saratoga and

110
114

132
15

31*
58*
88*

Saratoga and Hudson
4
4
5
4

6

Schuylkill Valley*
75*
116* 116*

Shamokin Val. & Pottsville*. 50
Shore Liue Railway
100
Sixth Avenue (N. Y.)..!
100
South Carolina
100
South Side (P. & L.) 4, p. 521. .100
South West.Georgia, 3, p. 616.100

75*

•

2*

5
5

’66 ’3"
’67

102

...

4

’67
’67
’67

2,000,000
1,008,600

2,335,500

Jan. A July Jan. ’67

2,233,376

2.300,000
1,700,000 Annually.
1,469,429

45
75

73

May ’66

2,9S9,090

393,073 May & Nov May ’67
900, (XX)

River..100 1,020,1)00
10" 1/‘00,000
576,050
50

Savaunah & Charleston.

LOO

June A Dec;Dec.
1,800,000 Jan. & July Jan.
2,530,700
800,000 April & Oct Apr.
500,000 April & Oct Apr.
800,000 April A Oct Apr.

Jan. A July Jan. ’67
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
6:35,200 Jan. A July Jan. ’67

809,450

750,000 Quarterly. May ’67

2*
2*
3
5

5,819,27?

3,36;,0O0

2,203,400 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’66

Syracuse, Bingli’ton & N. Y..100 1,200,130
Jan. ’67
Terre Hante A Indianapolis.. 50 1,983,150 Jan. & July
Third Avenue (N. Y.)
100 1,170,000 Quarterly
776,200
Toledo, Peoria, A Warsaw...100

3*
3
4
4

do

do

1st

pref.100 3,651,314

do
do 2d pref.100 90S,424
Toledo, Wabash & Western.. 50 5,700,(XX)

42*

m

125

128

do

_

Utica and

2,250,000 June & Dec June’67 4
52
2,860,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 1*

....

Vermont
and Canada*
100
Vermont and Massachusetts. .100

j|
I

78.
4

Virginia Central, 3, p. 678

j

h Western (Mass), 4, p. 247

112

.
...

Western (N. Carolina)

!

.100

2*
3/4

Jan. A July Jan. ’67
Jan. & July Jan. ’64

2,6S7,237

75 1,141,000

j Worcester-and Nashua..

II

3.353,679

.100 6,710,800
100 1,800,000

1! Western Union (Wis. <fe III.)
60
84

42*

May ’67 3* 65* 66*
preferred. 50 1,000,000 May & Nov Jan.
’67 4
834,400 Jan. & Julv
100
Black River

do

Canal.

Jan. A

IT

•

•

95

54

144*

•

July Jan. ’67 5*

Dec ’66
Chesapeake and Delaware.... 25 1,575,963 June & Dec
8,228,595
71*
| Chesapeake
and Ohio
;.." 50
25 1,633,1350 Feb. & Ang Feb. ’67
113*
8,535.700 January." •Jan. ’67
Delaware Division
do preferred
..
600.000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
joC 154
10,000,000 Feb. & AugjFeb. ’67
120‘
i
and
.. ’ *! ”l00
Delaware
Hudson
Erieand Northeast*
50
Jan. & July Jan. ’67
i Delaware & Raritan, 4, p. 599.100 2,9S7,412 Feb. A AugiFeb. ’67
Fitchburg
100 3,540,000
96*
4,156,000 Apr. A Oct. Apr. ’67 6
Lehigh Coal and Navigation 50 6,137,000 May & Nov May ’67
40
Georgia
100
Jan.
*fe
1,900,000
728,100
July,•’an.
’67
i Monongahela Navigation Co. 50
Hannibal and St. Joseph
100
60*'
Morris (consolidated)*, p.631.'10 1,025.000 Feb. A Aug, Feb. ’67
do
do
pref.100 5,253,836
ISO
120
Apr. ’67
Feb.
&
Quarterly.
3,000,000
do
Aug
Feb.
’67
1,175,(XX)
100
preferred
Hartford and New Haven. . .100
42
May '67
Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
10!)’ 110 { Schuylkill Naviga. (consol.).. 50 1,908,20* Feb.
Housatonicpreferred
100 1,1.80,000 May & Nov Apr. ’67
60
& Aug Feb. *7
Oct
April
&
13.937.400
2,888,805
1
Hudson River
100
do
prefer.. 50 2,052,083
32* 33
494,380
Susquehanna & Tide-Water.. 50
Huntingdon and Broad Top *. 50
190.750 Jan. & July Jan. ’67 3)4
do
50 2,907,850
do
prel. 50
119
119*' Union, preferred
Feb. ’67 5
Feb.
&
Aug
West Branch & Susquehanna’. 50 1,100,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’65
80
Illinois Central, 4, p. 311
100 23,386,450
Mar. ’67 4
Mar.
&
Sep
800,000 Irregular. Sept.’66
Wyoming Valley
50
Indianapolis and Cincinnati.. 50 1.689.900 Jan. & July Jau. ’66
Miscellaneous.
Jeffersonv., Mad. A indianap.100 2,000,000
94
l66’
300,000 Quarterly. Apr. ’67 i*
Coal.—American...
25 1,500.000 Mar. <$; Sep. Mar. ’67
,
Joliet and Chicago*
.100
300,000 Jan. & Julv Jan. ’67 4
50 2,500,(XX
Ashburton
Joliet and N. Indiana
500,000 Jun. & Dec. j Dec. ’66
Butler
25
Lackawanna and Bloomsburg 50 1,335,000
117
116*
2*
Apr.
’67
Quarterly.
."l00 5,000,000
Consolidation...
Lehigh Valley
50 10.734.100
3
40
’66
Nov,
42
514,646 lVlay & Nov
Central
100 2,000,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Lexington and Frankfort
100 3.572.400
29* 80*
June & Dec Dec. ’66 4
5,000,000
Cumberland
100
Little Miami
50
*60
Feb. ’67
Jan. & July July ’66 2
Pen n sy 1 van 1 a
50 3,200,000 Quarterly Jan. ’67
50 2.646.100
Little Schuylkill*
50
Feb. ’67 2
Jan.
&
Quarterly.”
3,000,000
1,250,000
July
Spring Mountain..
’* 50
50
Dong Island
Jan. ’67 8
Jan. &
50 1,109,594 Feb. & July
Louisville and Frankfort
Spruce Hill
10 1,000,000 Jan. A July
35
35
Aug Feb. ’6 4
5,500,000
Wilkesbarre
!.’!l00 3,400,000 Apr. A Oct
Louisville and Nashville
. .100
Feb. A Ang Aug. ’66
2,800,000
1.250.000
Wyoming Valley.. ’. ”!!! ’l00
Louisville, New Alb. A Chic. .100
May ’67
25 2,000,000 Feb. & Aug Aug. ’66
Gas.—Brooklyn
4,
Macon ana Western
100 1,500,000 May & Nov
124** isi*'
Citizens (Brooklyn)20 1,200,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67
McGregor Western*
100
Harlem
50
644,000
Maine Central
100 1,600,860
386,000 Jan. & July «an. ’67
Jersey City A H .boke’n!! 20
Marietta and Cincinnati
50 2,029,778 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’66 35.
165* *
Jan. & July Jan. *67
6,586,135
Manhattan
50
4,000,000
do
do 1st pref. 50
35.
2,800,000
do 2d pref.. 50 4,051,744 Mar. & Sep Sep. ’66 5
do
Metropolit n. ’
;. 100
May ’67
New Yor.r
’ 50 1,000,000 May & Nov May ’67
Manchester and Lawrence... .100 1.000,000 May & Nov Mar. ’62
5,312,725
750.000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
William
burg
50
Memphis & Chariest., 3p. 187.100
111
’67
Jan.
no*
43* 43*
A July
4,500,000
Michigan Central, 3. p. 152.. .100 T,502,866 Jan.
Improvement.
100.(16ipd)
Canton
68*
Feb.
’65
68*
Feb. & Aug
22* 23*
July ’66 20
Boston water Power.... 100 4,000,000
Michigan Southern & N. Ind..l00 9,813,500 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67 5
787,700
1,000.000
do
do
guar.100
Brujiswick
City
.‘l00
8S"
Feb. ’67 8
44
44*
Jan. A July Jan. ’67
Milwaukee A Prairie Du Ch.. .100 3,082,000 February... Feb. ’67 7
80
75
Telegraph.—\W&tGvn
Union.
100 28,450,000
February...
Quarterly.
10,000,000
2d pref. 1 OOf 1,014,000 Jan.
do
do
WesteiT.
Union,
Russ.
ExlOO
33* 34*
61* 64 ■
July
Nov’66
Milwaukee ar.d St. Paul
..100’ 3,627,000 Jan. &
55
100 10,000,000 Quarterly. Nov. ’66
55* Express.—Adams
Jan. ’67 510
64
60
&
9,000,000
Quarterly.
do
American
500
preferred
100 7,371,000 Jan. & July
16
July Jan. ’67 4
Mine Hill & SGhu3rlkill Haven 50 3.775.600
.300 20,000,000
Merchants’ Union
65
69
Dec. ’66
825,399
6,000,000
Quarterly.
United
States
100
Mississippi A Tenn.4, p. 489.100
64
65
Mobile and Ohio
100 3,588,300
Wells, Fargo & Co
100 10,000,GO0
l05
June
’67
2*
1,644,104
4,000,000
Quarterly.
Montgomery and West Point.lCO
70
Steamship—Atlantic Mail
100
Mar. ’67 3*5 65
3
137* 137*
Pacific Mail
100 20,000,000 Quarterly. June ’67
Morrie and Essex
50 3,500,000 Mar. A Sep
5
90
May
’67
May
A
Nov
600,009
Nashua and Lowell
100
S. American Navigation. .100
5
’66
Dec.
2,056,544
Nashville & Chattanooga ... 100
Union Navigation
100 4,000,000 Quarterly.
Feb. & Ang Feb. ’67
’67 5
Trust.—Farmers’ L. & Trust.. 25 1,000,000 Jan. A July Jan.
Naugatuck'.
100 1.408.600
Jan. & Juty Jan. ’67
500.000
Feb. & Ang Feb. ’67 10
New Bedford and Taunton .. .100
1,000,000
New
York
100
Life
A
Trust..
Jan. ’67
4
New Haven & Northampton..100 1,224,100
Union Trust.,
100 1,000,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67 5
145
Feb. &Ang Feb. ’67
Jan. A July Jan. ’67
New Jersey, 4, p. 183
1,500,000
100 5,000,000
United
States
Trust
100
7
8
895 000 Mar & Sep. Mar. ’67
New TjOT.den Northern
TOO
Mining.—Mari posa Gold
100 5,097,600
19* 20
5,774,400
N. Orleans, Opel. A Gt. WestlOO 4,093,425
Mariposa Gold Preferred. 100
N. O.,Jackson A Gt.N.,4,p.l34l00 4,697,457
Quartz Hill Gold
25 2,500,000
99* 99*
Feb. &
24
Feb. ’65
Hew York Central, 3, p. 709 ..100 26,530 000 Jan. & Aug Feb. }67
10,000,000
Qnicksilver
100
9T
July Jan. ’67
Noy,
’66
New York and" Harlem
50 6,285,G£L.
1000,000*May
&
Nov
Rutland Marble... ... ,, 96
•
preferred
50 1,500,00) Jap. & July'jan, ’67
do

100
100

Erie, 4, p. 599

■

500,000 May & Nov May ’67
500,000 Jan. & July Jau. ’67
16.570.100 Feb. & Aug Fab. ’6»

Providence and Worcester... .100
Raritan and Delaware Bay... .100
Rensselaer & Saratoga consollOO

in

34*
58*
88*

.100

Portsm’th.100 1,500,000

Portland, Saco, &

54

Dec. ’66

2,044,600 May & Nov May ’67
5,000,000 •Tan. & July Jan. ’67
Jan. & July Jan. ’66
5,391,5
4,841,600 April A Oct Apr. ’67
Quarterly. Apr. ’67
1.786,800 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
1.500.000 m ay A N ov May ’67
350,000 Jan. & July Jari. ’67
'67
1,514,301* Jan. & July Jan.
Jin. ’67
1,650,000 Jan. & July
1.316.900 Apr. & Oct Apr. ’67
2,384,9)0
406,132 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
Jan. ’67
11,238,550 Jan. & July
1,550.050
452,350
1,500,000
1,673,952
Mar. ’■ 7
March.
1,983,170
3,579,300 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
2,141,970

Portland & Kennebec (new).

54

53*

Apr. ’67 8*

6,000,000 Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67

A Georgia.. .100
A Viiginia . 100 1,902,000

*

....

35“

850,000
Cincin.,Richm’d A Chicago...100 1,600,250

Columbus <fc Indianap. Cent-.. 100
50
Columbus and Xenia*
Concord
50
Concord and Portsmouth!... .100
Conn.& Passump. 3,p.216 pref.100
Connecticut River
100

5s.
5
3

•

•

*

482,400 Peb. & Aug;Feb. ‘67 ■4"
260* ‘
50 7,000.000
6
Quarterly. Apr. ’67
Panama
100
102* 103
20,000. UUO May & Nov| May ’67 3c 5s
Pennsylvania
50 5,083,701) Jan. A JulyjJan. ’67 3
56*
Philadelphia and Erie* ;
50
105* 105*
Jan. & July Jan. ’67 5
Phila. and Reading, 4, p. 89.. 50 22,742,867
126
5
Apr. A Oct Apr. ’61
Norrist’n* 50 1,507.8*0 Jan.
Phila., Gennaut.
112
& July Jan. ’67 6
9.019,300
Phila., Wilming. & Baltimore. 50
1,776,129
Pittsburg and Connellsville.
50
Apr. ’67 2* 98* 98*
Pittsb ,Ft.W. & Chic.,4.p.471.100 9,940,987 Quarterly.

3*
5
5

•

Oswego and Syracuse

3*

do
pref. .100
9,100.000 April & Oet Apr. ’67
Chicago, Rock Isl. & Pacific.. 100 3,129,200 Apiil A Oct Apr. ’67
Cincinnati, Ham. A Dayton.. 100
Cincinnati and Zanesville
50
Cleveland, Columbus, &Cin..l00
Cleveland & Mahoning*...... 50
Cleveland, Painesv. & Ashta.100
Cleveland and Pittsburg
50
Cleveland and Toledo,*), p. 104 50

....!.
Ohio and Miss.certif., 4,p. 631.100 20,222,6471
do
preferred.. 100 3,( 07,197 January. Jan.
Old Colony and Newport..... 100 4,848,30CiJan. & Jnlyi Jan.
Orange and Alexandria ..... 100 2,063,655

13 e*

July July ’66
July

Annually.

13*

90

80

Jan. ’67

& Aug Feb. ’67
Ogdensburg & L. Champlain. 100 3,077,000jFeb.
356,400 Apr. & Oct Apr. ’67
do
preferred. 100

Ask

120* 125

Jan. ’67

3,068,400 June A Dec jnne ’67
4,518,900 Quarterly. Feb. ’67
4,000,000
2.469,1)07
Feb. ’67
3,150,150
2,36:3,600 Jan. & July Jan. ’67

Northern of New Hampshire.100
Northern Central, 4, p. 568..
50
North Carolina
100
North Missouri
100
North Pennsylvania
Norwich and” Worcester
100

5

May A Nov May ’b7

do

Dubuque and Sioux
do
do

Periods.

Haven... 100 6.000,000 Jan. A July
New York Prov. & Boston .. .100 l,755,281|Jan. & July
795 360
100
Ninth Avenue

2
4

June tSDec Dec. ’66

400,000

Cumberland Valley
Davt on and Michigan

standing.

New York and New

Brooklyn City and Newtown.100
850,000 Jan. & July
Baffalo, New York, <fc Erie*. .100 2,200,000 Feb. <fc Aug
100 5,000,000 Feb. &Aug
Buffalo and State Line
Camdeu and Amboy 4, p. 509.100
522.351,
Camden and Atlantic
50
do
do
preferred 50 600,000
721,926 Jan. & July
Cape Cod
0" 1,150.000
Catawissa*
— .. 50
2,200,003 April & Oct

preferred
Central Georgia & Bank’g
Cent ral of New Jersey

of Chron'cle containing
leased."

FRIDAY

Last paid.
Date, rate Bid.

out-

Iasi report. * means “

rate Bid. ,Ask.

100 996,647
100
Quarterly. Apr. ’67
.100 600,000
Berkshire*
250,000 June A Dec Dec. ’66
Blossburg and Corning*
50 11,877,000
Boston, Hartford and Erie... .100 1,830,000 Jan. A July Jan. ’67
Boston and Lowell
500 4,076,974 Jan. &July Jan. ’67
Boston and Maine, 3, p. 355.. .100
Jan. & July Jan, ’67
Boston ana Providence
100 3,360,000
4,500,000 Jan. & July Jan. ’67
100
Boston and Worcester
•Jan. A July Jan. ’67
Broadway A 7th Avenue
1 0 2,100.000
1,000,000 Feb. A Aifg Feb. ’67
Brooklyn City..
10 366,000

do

page

paid

VO 2,494,900!Feb. & Aug Feb. ’67
100 16,151,962! April.« Oet Apr. '67
100 1,650,0001 April A Oct Apr. ’67
100 4,429,000 Feb. A Aug Feb. ’67

and St Louis ♦

Atlantic A St.

out¬

par

Railroad.
Alton

Stock

Stock

name

FRIDAY.

-

Dividend.

**.—The rgure^ after the
refer to ihe vol. and

N.

Dividend.

—

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.

AND

RAILROAD, CANAL,

721

CHRONICLE.

THE

4
7
5
5

60*

60*

,

73

:

.

0

,

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

„

• •

• -

....

•

.

..

r&’k'v




C.v-V’f

.

•

•

THE CHRONICLE.

728

[June 8,1867.

RAILROAD, CANAL AND MISCELL/NEOUS BOND LIST.
by grivlner-ns Immediate notice of

Subscribers will confer a great favor

Interest.

DESCRIPTION.

K.B.—Where th^ total Funded Debt

2d col¬

is not
given in
in the
it is expressed by the dgnres
in brackets after the Co’s name.

detail

umn

Railroad s
Atlantic dk Qt. Western ($30,000,000):
1st
2d

Mortgage, sinking fund, (Pa.)

mg.

$2,500,000

1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (N. Y.) 1,014,000
Id
do
do
800,000
1st Mortgage, sinking fund, (Ohio) 4,000,000
id
do
do ) 4,000,000
1st Mortgage S’k’g Fund (Buff, ex
2,000,000
Consolidated Bonds
13,058,000

AUdnticdkSLLava. 1st Mort (Portland)
2d

Mortgage

Sterling Bonds
do

of 18 ’*4

Baltimore and Ohio. Mort (S F) 1834
do
do

do
do

Mortgage

*1
do
£•» idere Delaware :
it Mort. (guar. C. and 1.
*

,.d Mort.
id Mort.

do

Mortgage

I

do

1

Sinking Fund Bonds

Buffalo, N. Y. and Etue ($2,305,000):
1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage
Buffalo and Mate Line ($1,200,000):
1st Mortgage
Burlington db Missouri ($1,902,110) :
General Mortgage
Bonds conv. into pref. stock
Camden and Amboy ($10,204,403):
Dollar Loans
Dollar Loan.
Consolidated ($5,000,000) Loan...
Camden and Atlantic: 1st Mortgage
2d Mortgage —
Catawissa : 1st Mortgage ......
Central Georgia: 1st Mortgage..

Central of New Jersey : 1st mortgage
2d

Mortgage

364,0001

2,000,000
380,000
500,000

1st Mortgage (Skg Fund),
1st
do
2d
do
income

1,180,950
600,000
1,700,000
867,000
4,269,400
490,000
493,000
1141,000
786,000

900,000

483,000

pref

2.400,000
1,100,000

Chic., Burl, and Quincy ($5,754,400):
Trust

Mortgage (S. F.)

Chicago dr. Northwest. ($12,020,483):
Preferred Sinking Fund
1st Mortgage
Interest Bonds
Consol. S. F. Bonds,
Extension Bonds

conv.

Chicago, Rock Island db Pacific'.
1st Mortgage (C.'& R. I.)
do

1st

(new)

Cine., Ham. db Dayton ($1,629,000):
-1st Mortgage
2d

1st
„

Mortgage

do

.

Cle \, Pain, dk Ashtabula:
1st Mort. Bonds
2d Mort. Bonds

Cleveland & Pittsburg ($3,872,860):
2d Mortgage
3d
do
convertible
4th
do
*

CUveland and Toledo ($2,746,280):

Sinking Fund Mortgage
Mortgage Bonds of 1866

Connecticut River: 1st Mort
Conn, and Passumpsic R. ($800,000):
1st

Mortgage

Cumberland Valley:
2d
do
6 per cent bonds

1866
1878

1880
1885

1st
2d

1st

92

94

73

Feb. &

1,397,000
6,000,000

Jan. & July 1870
do
1896

1,250,000

May & Nov
Jau. <& July

Quarterly.
Aug

1,300,000
475,000

May & Nov
Jan. &

July

91

1,000,000

Jan. & July 1874
do
1880

1,129,000
1.619.500
1,107,546

M’ch & Sep 1873
do
1S75
Jan. & July 1892

2,081,000
300,000
250,000

Depot Bonds

Mortgage, guaranteed

500,000

Deux.. Lacka. dk Western

($3,491,500) :
1st Mortgage, sinking fund

do
Laekft.and West. 1st Mort
Dee Moines Valley ($2,088,000):
Mortgage Bonds ....
Detroit and Milwaukee ($5,206,680):
-

....

.......

1.122.500
1,668 000

101

572,000

43*

1887

$2,500,000
Mortgage,
1,000,000
2d
1st &
Funded Coupon Bonds..
1,006,640
Detroit and Pontiac R.R.
250,000
do
do
250,000
Detroit. Monroe dk Toledo ($734,000):
1st Mortgage..
934,000

May & Nov.

1875
1864
1875
1*78
1886




convertible

83 ‘

85

102

1st

o

various,
various.
Feb. A Aug

Feb. A Aug 1876

7

1872
1874
I8b5

....

•

•

•

•

...

.

Jan. &

....

.....

101
....

96
88

101*
’

100
98

86

S7*

....

July 1870
July 70-75

Jan. &
Jau. &

do
do

1882
1875
1870
1868
1888
1893
ISOS
1868
1808

•Jan. &

April & Oct
July

1S81
1883

6

Jan. &

1883

6

Jan. & July 1873
1876
do

rt
i

700,000
600,000

7
7

3,437,756
633,6(X'

7
7

700,000

Feb. & Aug
May & Nov.
Jan. & Julv

Mav & Nov.

July.

:
;

:

927,(XX i

2,o55.00(>

n

i

‘

1875
do 6 per cent

July

....

192,000

7

523,000

7

500,(XH
500,000

6
6

May & Nov 1870
Feb. & Aug 1875

6,663,500
2,523,(XX
2,563,1mm1

7
6

1875
1875

1,907,000

n

i

April & Oci
do
do
do

6

358,000' 6

97
97
•

.

.

•

9

i

.

.

.

.

...

•

.

•

•

.

•

•

•

75
....
‘

•

Feb. & Aug 1809
•T’ne & Dec 1885
May & Nov. 1875
1867
do

7

fund

...

.

.....

1 AQly'

A

KM*

UO/5

100
....
....

....

....

110
...

....

1890

1875

....

....

:

300,000

Mortgage

n*

«

Feb. &

Aug

1S82

600,000 7 •Jan. & July 1866
1870
do
364,000 10

Mortgage, (interest ceased)
do

.

Mortgage
Jefferson ville, Madison dk Indianapolis.
1st Mortgage
Jeffersonville RR., 2d Mort
Indianap. dr. Madison RR., 1st M..
Jeff., Mad. & Indianap., 1st Mort..
Joliet and Chicago :

Mortgage, Eastern Division....
do

do

Uhigh Valley ($1,477,000) :
1st Mortgage
Little Miami ($1,500,000):
1st Mortgage
Little Schuylkill
1st Mortgage,

97
8S

74

600,000.

7

•Jan. &

640,000

7

397,000

7

May & Nov. 1881
April & Oct 1873
May & Nov 1881
April & Oct 1906

612,500 7
2,000,000 ft
rt

1st
Mortgage, sinking fund
Joliet, and N. Indiana: 1st Mortgage
Lackawanna dk Blootnsburg 1st Mort
do
Exteusi n
2d Mortgage
do
Extension
La Ct'osse & Milwaukee:
2d

485,000

8

800,000

M

900,000

7
7
7
7

40n. OOU

500,000
200,000

July

1866

.

..

903,000
1,000,000

7
7

Jan. &

May & Nov.
July

1,485,000

6

May & Nov.

1873

1,300,000

6

May & Nov

1883

McGregor Western 1st Mortgage
Maine 'Central: ($ 2,733,800)

....

$l,l°ft,000 Loan Bonds

175,000

7

.....

....

•

.

.

•

>

•

.

...

.....

1882
1874
1875
1885
April & Oct 1SS0
May & Nov 1890

886,000 7 April & Oct 1877
500,000 6 Jan. & July 1875

Extension Bonds (Hunter’s Point),
do
do (Glen Cove Br.)
Louisville and Nashville ($3,297,000):
1st
Mortgage
1st Memphis Branch Mortgage ....
Marietta dk Cincinnati ($3,688,385):
1st Mortgage,

.

...

Jan. & July
Jan. & July
Tan. & July
March& Sep

1872
1869

($1.000,000):
sinking fund
1st Mortgage

$400,000 Loan Bonds
1st Mortgage (City Bangor) Bonds.
2d
do
(P.& K.RR.) Bonds..
Memphis dk Charleston : Mort. bonds

....

«%

«

•

«

....

....

Fob. & Aug 1890

150,000 6 May & Nov 1893
1,650,000 7 Jan. A July
280,000 7 May & Nov.

...

....

var.

var.

2,362,800 7 Feb. & Ang 1892
1,000,000 7 Jan. &July 1885
1,095,600 6 Feb. & Aug.
315,200 6 June & Dec.
660,000 6 Apr. & Oct.
300,000 6 Feb. & Aug.
1,294,000 7 May & Nov.

....

’90-’91

’70-’71
1874
1870
1880

...

....

Michigan Central, ($7,463,489)
Convertible

2,297,000 8 March&Sep. 1869
4,504,500 8 April & Oct 1882

Sinking Fund do

Mich. S. dk N. Indiana: ($9,135,840)

Jan. & July 1875

Ap’l & Oet.

1st

90

76

82*

Jan. & July 1867
do
1881
M’eh&April 1834
’81-’91
do

1,740,000

7

388,066

2.500,(XX)
326,(XX) 7

Indianapolis and Cine. ($1,362,284)

J’ne & Dec. 1876
Ap’l & Oct. 1904
do
1904
do

1875
WV*h«fc Sep 1881
Jan. & July 1871

149,006

927,000

Mortgage

1st Mortgage
2d
do
sinking
3d
do
Convertible

1st
2d

100,*

Jan. & July 1885
do
1886
M’ch & Sep 1878

April. & Oct

<

Indiana Central:

1890

500.000

7

Mortgage Whole Line

Redemption bonds
Sterling Redemption bonds

1893

Feb. & Aug 1873
M’ch & Sep 1876
Jau. & July 1875

Feb. & Aug
do

1,000,000 10 April & Oct
1,455,(XX) 7 Feb. & Aug

Mortgage

1880
1885
IS95

795,000
534,930
121,000

e

[Jan. & July

7

Huntingdon
dk Broad 7bp($1,462,142):
1st

1883

1863
1915
1885

160,9C(

6

7
6

1st

May & Nov

394, OCX
750,OCX

5

1,086,000

do
2d
Illinois Central:
Construction bonds,
do
do

July ’75-’S0

July
Ap’l & Oct.

7 Jan. & July 1883
H94
7
do

1,963,(XX

Rliriois and Southern Iowa

Jan. &

s

0-

(incl. in C. dk N. IF.):
Mortgage, sinking fund

Harff., Lvov, dr Fishkill :
Hudson River ($7,762,340):

May & Nov.

1877
1893

-a

■cS.

3,000, (MX 7 May & Nov. 1867
4,(XX),(XX 7 M’ch & Sep 1879
1883
do
6,000,(XXI 7
4,441,6(X 7 April & Oct 1880
926,506 7 J une & Dec 1888
3,816,582 6 M’ch & Sep 1875

2nd do
do
Greenville db Columbia: 1st Mort.
Bonds guaranteed by State.....
Bonds unsecured
Hannibal dk St. Joseph ($7,177,600)
Laud Grant
Mortgage
Convertible Bonus

1st

1870

Feb. & Aug 1883

May & Nov.
Jan. & July
Ap’l & Oct.

"i ^

'

($400,000):

New Dollar Bonds

1866

Jan. & July 1870

Jan. &

S

Payable.

July 18S0
570,U0C 5 April & Oct 1862

do
do
Grand Junction : Mortgage
Great West., 111.: 1st Mori., W, Div.

J’ne & Dec. 1877
May <fc Nov 1S72

1889
J’ne & Dec. 1893
Jan. & July 1873
Ap’l & Oct. 1879
Feb. & Aug 1882
Mar. & Sep. 1875
Feb. & Aug 1870
May & Nov. 1875
M’ch & Sep 1890

FRIDAY.

Gal. db Chic. U.

July ’873
Ap’l & Oct. 1879

April & Oct

•

300,(XX
660,(XX

1,000,(XX

Mortgage
Georgia

84*

-4-3

598,00C 7 Ap’l & Oct. 1888

•

:

Bonds

Et'ie and Northeast

Jan. &

2,000,000
484,000

283,000
2,606,000
642,000
169.500

Delaware:

2d

Pennsylvania:

Sterling convertible (£800,000)..

93*

108,100

do
do

1st

do

.

Erie Railway ($22,370,982):
1st Mortgage
2d
do
convertible
3d
do
4 th
do
convertible
5th
do
do

Feb. & Aug 1885
do
1885

109.500

Mortgage

Toledo

do

1st
5 per cent.

Dayton and Michigan ($3,732,430):
1st
2d
8d

do

Williamsport
Mortgage

1,250,000

600,000
161,000

1st Mort

2d section

do

Long Island:

Mortgage

Hubbard Branch

do

Sinking Fund Bonds

Feb. & Aug 1865
1865
do
1889
do

Ap’l & Oct.

:

Mortgage, 1st section

Elmira dr,

0

J’ne & Dec. 1867
M’ch t!fc Sep 1885
Feb. & Aug 1877
May & Nov. 1871

Cleveland cfc Mahoning ($1,752,400):
3d

East

May & Nov.
Ap’l & Oct. 1S<4
Ja Ap Ju Oc 1867
Jan. & July 1875
do

•

•5 ©

:

Mortgage, convertible

86

560,000
56,000

.

Cleveland, Col. and Cine. ($450,000)
1st Mort.(payable $25,000 per year)
1st

IK

name.

Eastern, Mass. ($1,843,400):

1st

do

Cincinnati Richmond db Chicago.
Cincinnati db Zanesville.

do
do
do

1st
1st

Jan. & July 1898

3,600,000
756,000

till 1870

Ap’l & Oct.

1877
1882
1879
1881
1876
1883
1884
1895

861,000

5,600,000

(consolidated)

do
do
do
do
Jan. & July

110

Chicago and Milwaukee:
1st Mortgage

in brackets after the Co’s

Dubuque and Sioux City

1S83
1S95

3,525,000

Chicago and Gt. Eastern 1st Mort..

Ap’l & Oct.

ing.

3

Hartford dr New Haven

7,336,000
1,500,000
673,200

Convertible Bonds
Cheshire Bonds
Chicago and Alton :

<

outstand

-

00

Harrisburg dk Lancaster

2,500,000

mortgage.I

1st

689.500
150,000

600,000

Central Ohio : 1st Mort
Central Pacific of Cal.:

«

1,225,000

444,00
200,1 H t

of Oct. 1861

do

E*

Ap’l & Oct.

200,000

Boston and Lowell:
Bonds o Jny Hit

'O

Jan. & July ’70-’79
do
1870

1,000,000
500,000

..

a

1,852,000

433,000

do
hossburaand Corning Bonds
jgoston, Cone, dk Montreal ($1,050,000):
1st
1st

915,280
628.500

1850
1853

Bdlefontaine ($1,745,000):
lot

1,5<|0,IH»268,909
484,000
619,036

1,024,750

Mortgage (S. F.) of 1855

s

13

=3

O

INTEREST.

DESCRIPTION.

t Amount

£•2

Payable.

;

fkidaT.

0)

03

Railroad

1,000,000

do

do

Amount
out sthnd

discovered in onr Tables.

any error

96

let Mortgage, sinking fund
2d
do
Goshen Air Line Bonds
Milwaukee db Prairie da Chien :
1st Mortgage, sinking fund
Milwaukee and St. Paul :
1st Mortgage
do
(Mil. & Western)
2d
do
Income Bonds
do
Real Estate

.

($6,133,243)

4,269,000 7 Jan. & July
324,000 7- April & Oct.
1,500,000 7 April & Oct
135,009 7 Jan. & July

8

n
75,848

4,187,0(0

Interest bond?

Mortgage Bonds (new)

600,000 6 Jan. & July 1876
do
1870
297,500 10

381,©Of

8

Montgomery & West Point .-$1,130,700

L.

1893
1893
1884
1875

96*
90

97

....

....

86

....

90

....

....

....

„

,.w .

•

.

..

•

••

....

:

Stealing bonds

Bonds of 1870
Income Bonds

863,000 7 May & Nov. 1885
do
1877
2,693/00 7
651,000 7 Feb. & Aug 1868
402,000 7 Jan. & July 1891

Mississippi db Tennessee ($1,0G9,600):
1st Mortgage
Income
Mobile and Ohio
Income bonds

4

t09

..

May & Nov. 1867
4

do
do
do

183*
188»

1876

100,000 7 Jan. & July 1870
do
1876
810,000 7
do
1881
750,000 7

e#* ••

—

•

• • •

»

•

•

•

•*

*•-*

•

•• •

•

•

• *

• • •

♦

June 8,

729

THE CHRONICLE.

1867.]

AND MISCELLANEOUS BOND LIST (continued).
will confer a great favor by giving us Immediate notice of any error discovered In
RAILROAD, CANAL

Subscribers

Description.

N.B.—Where the total

CJ

Amount

b.—Where the total Funded Debt outstand
not uiven In detail in the 2d col¬ •' mg.

la

"5

Payable.

expressed by the Inures
bruckete after the Co’s natne.
it is

umn

in

«

a

p.

«

the 2d col¬

M
0Q

<

Essex:
l«t Mortgage, sinking fund

s.ooo.uin
576,000
224,0<»U
180,000

do

Mortgage (convert.)
Northampton : Bonds...
Hampshire & Hamden R.R. do .
New Jersey ($855,000); Bonds of 1853
New London Northern: let. Mortgage
New Orleans, Jackson dt. Gt. Noi'th.:
1st Mortgage Sinking Fund
Naugatuck : 1st

'

dt Taunton

450,000

200,000

1st

6,450,438

33
37
33
33
76
76
76

2,925.000
165,000

606,000

1,398,000

3,000,000

Haven:
Bonds
Prov. and Boston :

Jan. &

July

6

Jan. A

July

0
7

50,000

2,500,000

Bonds :

($580,000):

Steamboat. Mortgage

Ogdensburg and L. Champlain:

1st Mortgage
Ohio and Mississippi:

Mortgage

R.R.:

;

1st Bxtenmon

2d Extension

($657,000).

Income

Oswego and Syracuse
1st Mortgage

..
...

by R. W. A

O.)

($311,500) .•

do

1,494,000

2,900,000

Jan. &
do

July

2
4

May & Nov.

.350,000

May & Nov

Jan. &

July
May A Nov
Feb. A

200,000

Aug

1st Mortgage
3d Mortgage

...

i
0

69
84
76
6
5
187 3

5
1*9:
*0

April & Oct

75
2
1

99

98

...

1st
2d

....

....

....

•

•

....

•

2d
do
Peninsula : 1st

1,150,000

do
Mortgage

1,072,000

Pennsylvania ($18,209,040);
1st Mortgage
do

2d

Phila. and Balt.
1st Mortgage

'

Jan. &

4,980,000

Jan. A

575,000

Erie ($13,000,000): 1,000,000
1st Mortgage (Snnbury A Erie)....
5,000,000
do
(general)
1st
4,000,000
2d
do
(general)'
..
Philadel., Germant. dt Norristown:
143.800
Philadelphia and

Convertible Loan

Philadelphia dt Reading
Sterling Bonds of 1836
do
do
do
Dol lar Bonds of 1849
do
do

•

do
do

($6,900,663);

(Turtle Cr. Div.)
Pb'g, Ft. W. and Chic.: ($12,573,500)
1st Mort.
1st
2d
3d

Mortgage

Bridge O. & P. RR

mortgage.

..

Pittsburg and Steubentille ;
1st Mortgage
do

Mortgage..

Quincy and Toledo: 1st

Portland dt Kennebec ($1,394,661):
1st mortgage bonds, ext
Consolidated bonds
Raritan and Delaware Bay:
1st Mortgage, sinking
Sd
do
Convertible Bonds

fund

1*4 Mort Rensselaer A Saratoga .
1st Mort Saratoga A Whitehall....
1st Mort. Troy, S A Rut. (guar.) .
Richmond dt Danville
4th Mortgage
Interest Bonds

($1,717^500):

Richmond db Petersburg.




976.800
228.500
200,000

($319.000):

registered ......

Mortgage,....

5

July

1884

400,000

Feb. A Aug 1889

5,250,000

Semi an’ally 1912
1912
do
April A Oct 1912

158.500
200,000

May & Nov. 1876
Jau. A July 1884

1,000,000

Feb. A Aug 1881
1881
do
1890

500,(MM)
500,000

April A Oct

230,060
300,000

do

1,000,(MM)
250,000

800,000

June A Dec 1875
0

[Mar, A Sep,

1870

July

1871

200,000

Jan. A

Juiy

1886

&pril A Oct

1876
1870
1894

96* * V.W
84X 84%

of 188-1

...

..

Bonds

Pt
Pennsylvania
& New
1st Mortgage (North
Sc
Navigation ;
Schuylkill
1st Mortgage
2d
do ‘

....

....

.....

900,000

E’eb. A Aug
do

2,500,000

May A Nov.

600,000

Apr. A Oct.

300,000

Coupon Bonds

200,000
636,000

1,500,000

•

•

•

•

....

....

8914
77*

65

69

1861

45

1867

27)4

56
SO

Jan. A Julv

188rr

1883

550,000

Fan. A

July

511,400

Feb. A

Aug 1875

400,000

Fan. A

July

562,800

April A Oct

1873

1878

April A Oct '68-’71
4,319,520
70-’76
689,000
936,5U) 6 April A Oct 1875
696,UK) 6 Jan. A >nly 1890

200,0U

I

175,0U

25,0U
500, (MX

6
7

6
(5

1896

••

May A Nov.

1870
1871
1877

•

•

Quarterly.

6
6
6
6

148.UH)
768.250

do
Jan. A July

April A Oct
do

1884
1887

6 Mch A Sent
6 Jan. A Julv
6 May A Nov.

1872
1882
1870

Jan. A July
do

1865
1878

6
6

1,183,701
1,098,UK)
227,5(59

.

♦

•

•

•

t,

•

t,

•

•.

....

....

S7X

....

•

76X

66X

67

••••••

.

600,000

6

May A Nov. 1883
Ian. A July 1878
Tan A July 1878

2,000,000

7

Jan. A

6

3,000,000

•

...

1878

1S76
1876

980,670
586,500

•

1870

590,000 6 May A Nov.

1,764,330

...

.

536,000 7 Mch A Sept 1870
752,000 7 Jan. A July 1865
414,168 6

•

t(f

•

5,434,351

•

•

1890

•Jan. A Julv
do
'

6

...

do
Feb. A Aug

2,356,509 6 Jan. A July ,1886
3,000,00c 6 JaAp J u OC 51870
do ^ 1890
4,375,UK 5
1885
1,699,50C 6
800,000 6 Jan. A July 1878

3

88
89

77X

do

Fune A Dec
Jan. A July

2,000,000

Branch)..

pref. int. bonds

76X 77

Apr. A Oct. 1886
May A Nov. 1875
Mar. A Sep. 1882
Fan. A July 68-’74

232,087

u
Union (Pa.): 1st Mortgage
West
Branch and Susg. .1st Mortgage
n
w
Wyoming Valley : 1st Mortgage..

MIX

new

1890
1878
1883
1871

1,000,000

Mortgage

Improvement.
St
Susquehanna and Tide-Water:
Maryland Loan.
Susquehanna Canal

....

Jan. A July
June A Dec

1,600,000

York:

750,000 6

....

miscellaneous:

....

Feb. & Aug *73 ’76
69 ’76
do

826,000

o ’ll

Morris. Mortgage
M
Boat Loan

Mch A Sept 1879
1890
1890
1880

1st Mort
Maryl’d Loan

and Ohio:

M
Monongahela
Navigation:

....

....

do
do

140,547

1

Mch A Sept 1888
1888
do
1876
do

May A Nov.

400,000
840,000
500,000

1*83
1895

Jan. A

Navigation

....

....

....

2,000,000

...

Delaware
Division: 1st Mortgage..
n
Delaware
and Hudson;
D
Plain bonds (coupon)
Erie
E
of Pennsylvania: 1st Mortgage
L
Lehigh
Coal and
:
Loan of 1870

...

....

Jan. &

Bonds

Sterling Bonds, guaranteed
Preferred Bonds

1871

1886

Mort. Bonds

C
Chesapeake
and Delaware;

....

Jan. A July ‘70 ’75
10 ’72
do
’65 ’68
do

650,000

Guaranteed (Baltimore)
Canal

...

....

300,000
300,0^0
175,000

1.180,000

91

90

1867

Feb. A Aug 1872
Mar. A Sept 1870
Jan. A JuJy 1886
68-74
Various.

1,400,000

52

1875
1875

55,000

300,000

do
do

c
Chesapeake

450,000

£130,500
175,000

92)4 92X

May & Nov. 1868

208,000

Reading and Columbia:
1st Mortgage
Rsnsmaer <fe Saratoga consolidated :

Bonds, coupon A

1,521,000

5,160,(KM)
2,000,(MM)

do
do

Akron Branch; 1st

2d

April A Oct

Jan. & July
do
do
do

106,000

Mortgage Loan
Pittsburg d: Connellsville ($1,500,000):

1882

Jan. A July
do

408.000

182,400

1843-4-8-9
Sterling Bonds of 1843
Dollar Bonds, convertible
Philadelphia <fe Trenton : let Mort..
Philadd., Wtiming. & Baltimore:

July

....

Jan. A July
June A Dec

700,000

..

Dollar Bonds
Western
Maryland :
}
1st Mortgage
1st
do
, guaranteed
Union: 1st Mortgage ....
r
Western
i
York
<{* Cumberland (North. Cent.):
1 st Mortgage
2d
do
...

....

1876

1881
1901

j

99)f

....

April & Oct
April A Oct
April A Oct
Jan. A

2,661,600

1861

July

8

74

1^92
1892

July

Sterling (£899,900) Bonds
Albany City Bonds

....

93X

April A Oct

4,904,840

Central ($800,000):

July

....

....

Jan. A July
June A Dec

Jan. A

(guaranteed)

....

1900

800,000
600,000

Warren :■
1st Mortgage
Westchester
]
dt Philadelphia :
1st Mortgage (convert.) Coupon .
, registered
2d
do
}Western (Mass.) (6,269,520):

.

J. A. J.AO.

1,290.000

IVermont Central:
1st Mortgage (consolidated) ....>.
2d
do
Vermont and Massachusetts >
1st Mortgage

....

1594

Aug 1900

(guar, by Peteisburg)

/

....

April A Oct.

1st Mort. bonds 2,286,111
Loan
1,070,000

Convertible
Troy Union ($680,000);

....

1894
1894
1894

Feb. A

Mortgage

3d

....

....

Semi an’ally
do

981,000

Syra. Bing. andN. Y. ($1,595,191);
1st Mortgage
Third Avenue (N. Y.): 1st Mortgage
Toledo, Peoria and Warsaw :1st Mort
Toledo H abash
Western:
1st Mortgage (old).
\
1st do '
extended
2d Mortgage
Equipment bonds (Tol.'A Wab.)
Sinking Fund Bonds (T. W. A W
Troy ana Boston ($1,452,000);

....

1875
1881

700,000

Pacific R.R..
B’d

v

A July
Feb. A Aug

1,20 ,000

S. W Pacific, Railroad:
Bonds guar. sy At. A
k
Southern
Minnesota: Land Grant
Staten Island: 1st Mortgage

«...

....

Jan. A July
do.
Jan.'A July

Feb & Aug
Mch A Sept

:..

Jan

May A Nov.

1,372,000

Special Mortgage

...

...

...

Pacific,

762,000

2,800,000
1,700,000

^^

»

400,000
1,110,500
570,000

...

86

*

April A Oct

var.

2,200,00C

South Ca?vlina ; Sterling
Domestic Bonds
South Side. ($1,631,900):

••*

...

Jan. A July
Feb. A Aug

189,000

guaranteed by Missouri....
Panama: •
1st Mortgage, sterling

•

100,000
300,000

var.

400,(KM)
329,UK'

Pottsmle:

1st Mortgage I
Shore Line Railway:

...

1

360,000

April & Oct

946,000

1st Mortgage

Shamokin Valley dt

943si 96

April A Oct

198,500

; —

-:

July

April & Oct

180,000
223,000

Alexandria ($2,923,004):

Oswego dr Rome
1st Mortgage (guar,

2d

Jan. A

750,000

or
or

’O

Feb. A Aug 1863
1863
do

1,800,000

Funded Bonds

...

75

530,000

1st Mortgage

...

Second Avenue:

1,458,000

do
do

>3
>S

521.500

1st Land^Grant Mortgage (tax free)
Sandusky and Cincinnati:
Mortgage bonds
Sandusky; Mansfield and Newark:

....

100), i :oo)«

72

April A Oct
Mar. & Sep.

339,000

-

...

d.
k5
K)
4
7

724,000

•

90
90
'03
106

Quarterly.

1,500,000
2,500,000

($6,000,000).
Pennsylvania ($3,124,737)

1st'Mortgage

95>E

’78

General Mortgage

& Newpoi't

96

Feb. & Aug
»an. A July

LX),00

2d Mortgage

...

250,000

Bonds...

2d
3d

May & Nov.

‘

•

...

April A Oct

149.400

Bonds
do
do
Oranne &

do
do

•

...

1,000,000

Improvement. Bonds

Old Colony

do
Feb. A Aug

.

...

Feb. A Aug
do

Noi'thern antral ($5,211,244).*
1st Mortgage, Slate (Md.) Loan....
2d
do
3d
do «■ • .

1st

May A Nov.

...

1,000,000
1,000,000

Mortgage.

ChattelMortgage
Norwich and Worcester
General Mortgage

June A Dec

460,000

Mortgage

Mortgage

.O

Jan. & July 1880
Jun. &Dec. ’69-’72
Jun. &Dec. 1891

709.500

Mortgage

do
Sacramento Valley:
1st Mortgage
do
W. Louis, Alton dt Terre Haute :
let Mortgage
2d Mortgage preferred
2d
do
income.St. Louis, Jacksonville dt Chicago:
1st Mortgage
St. Paul dt Chicago ($4,000,000):
1st Mort. land grant, S. F. guar ...
St. Paul dt Pacific oj Minn : (1^ Div)
1st Mortgage (tax free)

..

May A Nov

3d Mortgage
N lork and New

North

74

1,730,000

July

-pril A Oc

1st

...

39

Consolidated Mortgage

lgt

....

Apr. A Oct

General Mortgage

:

OJ

If
£&

Payable.

ing.

R. W. & O., sinking fund
Rutland and Burlington:

...

B6
90

Bonds
(renewal)..
Subscrip. Bonds (assumed stocks)
Sink Fund B’ds (assumeddebts).;
Bonds of August, 1S59, convert.. i
Bonds of 1865
New York and Harlem ($6,098,045) ;

Northern New Hampshire
North Carolina: Loan
North Missouri:

April A Oct

76
81
69

Jan. &

Bonds of October, 1863
Real Estate Bonds

1st

«...

Jan. A July
do
Tan. A July

2,741,000
423,000

York antral:
Premium Sinking Fund

N. Y..

...

73
S5

140,000

New

1st

5
May A Nov. 1915

Feb. A Aug
•Jan. A July

485,000

Mortgage
• • • • •—
Orleans, Opelou. dt Gt. nest.:
Mortgage Construction Bonds.

2d
New

outstand¬

w

•H

Railroad:

Moiris and

New Bedford
N Haven dt

1>E*DAT.

Amount

Rome, Watert. & Ogdens. .($1,848,000)
Sinking Fund (Wat. A Rome)
Potsdam A Watertown, guar. ..

Railroad:
2d

Funded Debt

is not given in detail in
umn it is expreseed by the figures
in brackets after the Co’s name.

’O

v

onr Tables,

interest.

Description.

FRIDAY.

interest.

....

...

American Dock <jj Improvement:
iBonds (guar. Cen.R.R. Co. of N.J.)
Co
Covington and Cincinnati Bridge :
1
1st
Mortgage

....
'

—

....

....

....

Bonds

Consolid.
CoalOo.(Md.): Mort.( conv.)
Co
Cumberland Coal: 1st Mortgage..t.
Cu
Me
Mariposa Mining: !
1st
1
Mortgage
2d
do
2

Coal: Mortgage Bonds.
Qu
Minmo :
QuicksUi'er
1st
Mort.,prin.&int. payable in gold
1

Pci
Pennsylvania
...

•

• •

•

« At*

2
9d
4 4 4

,

**»*

* 4

4

•

4.1

do

lesUm Union
JV&
1 Mortgage
lift

do

Telegraph:

co»T«fiibI0<

■

429.000 6
629,000 7

417,000

•

•

7
7
6J0 006 7

1,500,000
2,000,0U

500,000 7

1*000,Oft

?

•

July

188)

•

•

•

•

Jan. A July 74-’P4
Tan. A July 1885
Jan. A J nly 1879
Tan. & July

April A Oci
Feb. A Aug
t Tune A Dec
JTat). A July

VWMW v%

1818 1881

1873
18T»

•

•

•

•

#

•

•

,4 V

«V#s

[June 8,1867.

CHRONICLE.

THE

730

Marked thus (*) are
Companies.

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Allen Wright
Bemis Heights
Bennehoff Run

5
....10

•

•

•

•

.

.

2 50

.

Bid. Askd

-

par 20

Hammond

10

par

UamiltonMcClintock...

.

2
2

Manhattan

Bradley Oil

...

Brooklyn

4

,

,

,

....

Buchanan Farm....
Central
Cherry Run Petrol’m— 2

Cherry Run special.
Clinton Oil

Empire City

....

Excelsior
First National

5

.

1 50

.

....

...

5
5
...JO
..10

•

•

•

•

....

•

15

....

....

....

....

....

....

....'

....

..

3 50

....

•

....

....

•

•

•

.

..

50
•

•

75
25

•

20

...

....

....

3 00
15
3 50

1 30
6
2 00

....

Bid. Askd
j

paid 3

Adventure
iEtna

Lake Superior
Madison
Mandan
8 S7 Manhattan
1 Mass
Medora

Alfouez

1#

American

1

.Amygdaloid

....

3

/Upr»rnnb

8 75
....

...17
2

.

Atlas
Aztec

....

...

....

2#

Caledonia

•

.

....!

.

.

New York
North Clift’
North w estern
Norwich

....

1 00

2 00

••••!

66

24# 25

25 50

....

75

20#
1#
1#

...

.

Dudley

Eagle River

•

-

.

•

.

•

•

1 : Pontiac

•

.

..

.

.

|

1

5#

....

9#

•

.

•

.

.

«

.

.

X

•

Huron
Indiana
Isle Royale*
Keweenaw

Knowlton

•

•

•

•

•

•

.

.

.

•

•

.

.

.

•

•

•

•

.

.

.

,

.

....

....

•

.

•

.

24 00

#

12
3
1

S 25
4 12
....

•

•

•

8 75
•

•

•

•

•

•

•

-

.

1

..

•

•

....

....

....

*

*

•

*

6
1

..

West Minnesota
i Winona
1

•

•

•

•

»

.

•

•

•

....

50

50
1 50
25
.

■

.

.

•

•

1 00
87
1 87
•

•

•

•

• •

•

•

....

Commonwealth.. 100
Continental * .... .100
50
Corn Exchange.-.
100
Croton
40
Eagle
.100
Empire City
50
Excelsior
30
Exchange
17
Firemen’8
Firemen’s Fund.. 10
Firemen s Trust. 10
25
Fulton

....

4#

25
50

Hamilton
Hanover
Hoftman
Home

15
50
50

*

.100

50
50
.100
Import’ & Traders 50
.100
International
25
Irving
30
Jefferson

Howard
Humboldt

50

King’s Co’ty(Bklyn)20
Knickerbocker... 40
Lafayette (B’klyn) ...50
Lamar
Lenox
Long Island

i

oo

Capital of Lake Superior companies generally $500,000, in 20,000 shares

GOLD AND SILVER MINING STOCK LIST.
Bid. Askd'

Companies.

Albin
Alameda Silver
American Flag
Atlantic & Pacific

Ayres Mill &

10

par

...

...

—

Mining

66

9

—

10

75

85
3 00

1 10

—

50
5

75
80
2 00
....

.

Bullion Consolidated....

Burroughs.

par

_

10

2 50

2

19
14

25

Hope

•

•

•

•

• • • •
«

•

•

66
1 35

1 40
7

•

-

.

Lieb'g”.

•

Mr mtann

6 50

Corydon

1 55

GO

.

.

25

.

5
10

50

70

65! Nye
....
10 Ohio & Colorado G.& S. 45
G G5 People’s G. & S. of Cal. 5
25
:
Hill
tOj Quartz
Reynolds

1 10
50
1 62

...

•

.

•

•

10

50

..

....

1C1

1

.

Rocky Mountain

Fall

River
First National

in 9*;

....

Smith & Parmelee

—

....

...

Gilpin

20

.1 Symonds Forks

—

Texas

Gold Hill

....

4 CO;

—

Vanderbnrg

60
1 65
4
78
in no

7

Seaver
S<»nspndprfer

Eagle

90
7

4

—

—

...

4 25! 4 35
75 1 50
12
19
70;
75

Companies.

PJienix

LeaaC

lyon Tank storage




15L229

2,000,000 2,271,387
200,000
500,000
200,000
200,000

1,000,000
200,000
200,010
150,000
280,000

150,0U0
300,000
150,000
200,000

«

546,522
195,926
167,833

200,000

195,546

200,000
300,000
150,000

245,169

National
7#
25
New Amsterdam.

200,000

Equitable

210,000
200,000

Metropolitan * t..
Montauk (B’klyn)
(R’klyn).
—

3 35

N.Y.Fire and Mar.100
50
Niagara
North American* 50
25
North River
25
Pacific
100
Park
20
Peter Cooper ....

Phoenix t
Relici.

I....

Br’klyn

Resolute*
Rutgers’
St. Mark’s
St. Nicholast
Security t
Standard

Stuyvesant

.

1,000,000
500,000
350,000
200,000
200,000

150,000
150,000

50

1,000,000

50

200,000
300,000

25
25
50
50
.100
100

Tradesmen's

300,000

90

100
100
25

Republic*

150,000

200 000
200.000

150,000
150,000

1,000.000
200,000
200,000
200,000

25

200,000

25
9,6

150,000

50
Washington *t... .100

250,000
400,000
393,700

Williamsburg City.50
Vonkers & JN. Y.. 100

150,000
500,000

United States....
.

••

.....

....

• •

5
July ’66 ..5
Aug. ’* 6

•

....

Oct. ’65.. .5
Jan. ’67 ..7
Mar. ’64..6

....

...

,

«

•

.

•

.

•

.

•

.

•

.

«

.

•

.

•

.

•

.

'

4

....

Jan.’67...5

....

....

Jan. ’67

.5

.

Feb.’67 ..6

.

,

•

#

..

•

..

•

.

•.

•

•

..

#

•

•

.

•

•

.

.

..

•

•

•

.,

•

•

•

.

,

•.

....

*

.....

Aug ’66..5
Apr. ’65..5
Jan. ’67 3#
Jan ’67..5
Jan.’67 .5

....

•

•

•

.

•

.....

*

......

July’66 .5

^

.

.

.

.

....

,

....

,

,

.

....

.5

July’65 ..5

....

.

,

.

.

t

.

.,

.....

.5

.

.

Jan. ’67 .5
Jan. ’67..5
Jan. ’67 3#
Jan.’67 ..5
Jan. ’67..5

•

•

•

Jan. ’67 .10

....

....
.

•

Feb. ’67..5
do
Jan. and July. Ang.’66 .5
Feb. and Aug. Feb.’66.3#
Jan. and July. Jan.’67 ..5
do
July ’66 ..ff

Ang. ’66
.

July'66 ..5

#

.

#

,

.

•

•

.,

• •

.,

•

,

.

..-

....

.

.

,.

,

.

....

..

#.

•

•

.

•

,,

,

.

.,

.

.

.,

.

.

.

.

,

..

,

,

,

,

,

.

.

.

....

•

•

•

•

•

....

.

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

*

.

.

.

.

....

«...

♦ •

...

.....

•

•

•

•

*

....

.

.

.

.

•

•

•

•

.

.

...

•

•

r

•

•

»

.

»

.

-

•

•

•

....

•

•

•

•

•

.

5

Jan.‘67..5
Jan.’67 .5
Feb.’67... 5
Feb. ’67...5
Jan. ’87 ..5

c

.

.....

July ’65 ..5

do
Jan.’67.3#
do
185,952
July’66.3#
216,879 Feb. and Ang. Feb. ’67..5

.

.

....

4

July ‘66

.

.

....

.

Feb. aud Ang.
Jan. and July.
do
Feb. and Aug.
190,206 F°b. and Ang.
179,008 Jan. and July.
do
501,244

.

,

•

....

Jan. ’67.3#

Jan. ‘67

•

..

....

.

.

#

•

..

...

.

Jan. C’

*

.

....

July’66.3#
July ’65 .5
July ’66 .5
July ’66 ..5
July’65 ..5

,, 4

•

.

...

July’64 ..5
Apr. ’67..5
July’66 . .7

453.233

156,220
962,181
226,756
195,780
206,781
198'182
158,733
336,691
630,314

•

..

do
July’66 ..5
511,631
379,509 April and Oct. Apr. ’67..5
244,293 Jan. and July. Jan.’67.. 6
Jan.’67 ..5
do
212,521
Jan. ’67 ..5
do
185,365
14‘,203 Feb. and Aug.
1,077,288 Jan. and July. Jan ’67..5
do
July ’66. .5
190,167

140,679

,

•

.

Jan.’67..5
Jan. ’67..8
Jan. ’67 ..6
Jan.’67..4
Jan. and July. Jan.’67 ..6
247.895 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67.. 5
1,053,825 Jan. and July. Jan.’67 ..5

161,743
259,270
228,628
319,870
264,703

,

•

^

July’64 ..4
Jan. ’67 .10
Feb. ’67.7#
Jan.’67. 5

.

••

#

....

.

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

516,936

•

.

.

July ’65 ..5
July ’65 .6
800,604 Feb. and Ang. Aug.’66.3#
Feb. ’67..5
do
206,179
238,808 March and Sep Mar.’67 ..4
176,67S Jan. and July. Jan. ’67 5
Jan. ’67 ..5
do
302,741
do
Jan. ’67 ..5
141,434
do
Jan,’67 ..5
863,006
do
July ’65 ..4
121,607
Jan. ’67.,5
do
284,006

Bid. Askd

par

5

....

—

....

...

100
5

«

•

•

•

—

•

*

.

.

,

—

•

.

•

•

....

•

•

...

—*

—

....

Bid. Askd

Companies.

Tudor Lead
.par —
25
Saginaw, L. S. <fe M.
.

,

....

Wallkill Lead
Wallace Nickel
Rutland Marble

....

J

.

...

.....

f

...

.

....

•

•

.

•

•

....

.

.

.

.

^

.

.

.

••

25

’

"50
8

53

66

Long Island Peat....
Russel FLe
Savon de Terre

Question.—In the Supreme Court

(General Term) before Judges Leonard, Bernard and Clerke, Francis
Alexander sued the Sun Mutual Insurance Company on the following
counts:
Plaintiffs insured the brig “E. F. Newton,” afterwards “Antonio Mathi,’
valued at $10,000, in the defendant's company, for the sum of $8,000, against
marine risks, for one year from the 1st of July, 1804. She sailed from Belize,

Honduras, August, 1364, with a cargo

bound for this port.

On the following

day she went ashore on the main reef near Kay Chappelle, and oh the 30th
drove over the reef with the loss of a forefoot and leaking badly.
The master communicated the facts of the case to the owners and requested
instruction'1, expressing his opinion that in view of the enormous expense
attending permanent repairs at Belize, the brig should only be put in sufficient
repair to enable her to make the voyage to New York, wnere she could he put
and with their fall concurrence, the

master was instructed to (a ise such temporary repairs to
the re airs so made was $c?,769 74.
After th° arrival of the brig in New York ehe was put

be made. The bill for

into thorough repair,

additional cost of $4,547 21.
The defendants insisted that the

an

..

....

Important Marine Insurance

in repair at a much lea* expense.
This letter was submitted to defendants,

MISCELLANEOUS STOCK LIST.

....

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

419,952

..

•

60

_

New York

...

Foster Iron
Lake Superior Iron
Bucks County Lead
Denbo Lead
Manhan Le&d

200,000
200,000
200,000
150,000
400,000
200,000

.100
50
100
..50
50

Mercantile
Merchants’

Washington

2
—

1,000,000

1,000,000 1,118,664
610,930
600,000
Manhattan
288,917
Market*
200,000
222,921
200,0§0
Meehan’ & Trade’
146,692
Mechanics (B’klyn).50
150,000

Sterling *

—

mooo

•

Jan. ’67 ..6

424,189 Feb. and Ang.
228,696 Jan. and July.
234,872 April and Oct.
1,289,037 Jan. and July.
404,178 March and Sep
36,51 S Jan. and July.
424,293 April and Oct.
203,990 Jan. and July.
do
229,276
134,063 Feb. and Aug.
241,840 Jan. and July.
do
121,468
do
165,933
do
250,766
149,689 May and Nov.
227,954 Feb. and Aug.
525,762 „an. and July.
200,015 Jan. and July.
2,385,657 Jan. and July.
255,657 Feb. and Ang.
170,225 April and Oct.
177,173 Jan. and July.
do
162,571

25
100
100
25

Lorillard*

Star
15
50

300,000
200,000
200,000
150,000
204,000
150,000
150,000
200,000

214.147

..

July’64.3#

do
do

309,622

M*

•

...

•

10

Central
Church Union
Columbia G.
S
Consolidated Colorado.. •Consolidated Gregory.. .100

Copake Iron

(B’kly).50

—

....

—

.

Crozier
Des Moines
Downieville

Grass Valley
Gunnell
Gunnell Union
Holman

1 50 Keystone Silver........
Do Knickerbocker
3 oo; Kipp & Bnell
LaCrosse
1 ool Liberty

—

.

1

•

*

.

Bates & Baxter
Benton

Bob Tail
Boscobel Silver

!

Bid. Askd

Companies.

100
25

_

.

t Capital $500,000, in 100,000 shares.

Capital $1,000,000, in 20,000 shares.

—

‘

200.000

500,000
200,000

Greenwich
Grocers’
Guardian

92,6S3 Jan. and July
do
384,266
338,878 Feb. and Ang.
275.591 Jan. and July.

500,000
400,000

150 000

Sale.

paid.

Feb. ’67..6

do

238.506

250,000

Last

Bid.
Last

Periods.

151,002 Jan. and July.
325,233 •Jan. and July. Ian. ’67 .5
515,896 Jan. and July. J. ’67.8iz3i
222,073 Jan. and July. Jan. ’67
2S2.12': Jan. and July. Jan. 65. ..5
257,753 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’66...5
336,476 March and Sep Mar. ’67..5
204,796 May and Nov.
170'171 Feb. and Aug. Aug. ’65..4
345,749 June and Dec. Dec. ’66..5
266,368 Feb. and Aug. Feb. ’67...6

300,000

210,000
250,000
500,000
200,000
400,000
200,000

DIVIDEND.

1867.

Netas’ts

200,000
500,000
250,000
300,000
200,000
200,000
300,000
200,000
153,000
150,000

50

People’s
% Capital $200,000, In 20,000 6hares.

,

200,000

100
50
50
Globe
Great Westem*t. 100

.

3
-■

70
100
Clinton
.100
Columbia*
Commerce (N.Y.). .100

N. Y.

2#

..

Wiuthrop

l

•

..

Washington
9 00

....

1#
1#

•

100
20

.

....

..

Tremont
i Victoria
4 87 Vulcan

8

.

...

•

—

..

....

5

•

....

•

JO#

..

1 50

4 25

33

•

•

«...

.

....

25

•

•

•

6 50

....

Hungarian

....

....

.

3/

i

•

..

—

5
1
19
10

•

...

.

...

2#
.

•

10

....

7 50
50

Hope

•

..

....

-

.

.

1 50

..

,

•

•

•

_...

....

13 00

2

•

•

5# 1 00
3# 12 00

St. Clair
'
St. Louis
St. Mary’s
5#
Salem
#
1 ‘
Seneca
Sharou
#
Sheldon & Colurutian.21
1
1 50 South Pewabic
1 GO South Side
Star
..11#
8
Superior
.,21
| Toltec

....

•

•

•

....

....

.

..J7

ITnpp

Princeton

.

Broadway
Brooklyn
Central Park
Citizens’
City

Gebhard
Germania

....

.

Ridge
Rockland

....

•

....

Resolute

•

....

•

4 25

Quincy*

....

•

5#

..

•

! Portage Lake

....

•

....

..15

& Boston.

Providence

Evergreen Bluff...

Hecla
Hulbert
Humboldt

•

....

....

Everett
Excelsior
Flint Steel River..
Franklin
French Creek
C-lira rd
Great Western....
Hamilton
Hancock
B anover
Hilton

•

•

•

.

1%
10

Ed wn rd a

Empire.....

....I j Phoenix
Pittsburg

....

Jl#

..50

1 00 Petherick
1 00, Pewabic

....

1

•

•

..

Pennsylvania *

....

....

•

..11
7

Orima

1

Dacotah
Dana
PavidRun
Delaware
Dev-n
Dorchester

.

...

4

..

..

....

.

•

..—

•

•

5#

..

..

....

•

•

4 00

1
Naumkeag
New Jersey Consol.. ..10

—

5
4

1#

..

National
Native

50

—

....

.

Minnesota

10 00

•

....

G#

•

•

I Milton

.

66 ....{

30

—

Copper Creek
Copper Falls

-

.

....

....

.

Calumet
Canada
Charter Oak
Central
Concord

..5”

I

•

»

1#

•

•

•

•

.

.

4#

..

•

....

....

4#
5#

....

4 00

•

2
G

.

..

Mendotat
1 Merrimac
4 50 1 Mesnard

....

4#
13#

Boston

.

....

25#

Albany & Boston.

paid 1

Lafayette

....

11

25
25
25

—

(Alb’y).lOO
50
Commercial

Bid. Askd

Companies.

«

$300,000
300,000

Commerce

COPPER MINING STOCK LIST.
Companies.

25
50
50
American *
...
AmeHcafa Exch’e. .100
50
Arctic
25
Astor
Atlantic (Br’klyn) ..50
95

Bowery (N. Y.)

....

w

1

Capital.

Beekman

....

•

--

10
5
Shade River
10
Union
United Pe’tl’m F’ms.... 2
10
United States
10
Venango (N. Y.)

15

....

...

« •

Jan.

write Marine Risks.

Adriatic
AStna

•

•

•

participating, and (t)

....

....

.25

Rynd Farm

...

•

5
5
1
JO

Oceanic
Pit Hole Creek
Rathbone Oil Tract

....

...10
5

5

.

N.Y,Ph. ABalt.Cons

....

....

Great Republic
G't Western Consol

15
85

40

*

Germania

N. Y. & Alleghany
New York & Newark...
N. Y. & Philadel

....

....

5

Naturul

....

...10
5
....10
...100

Brevoort

•

.

....

Mountain Oil

10
5

Bergen Coal and Oil

•

—

Ivanlioe

3 00

LIST.

INSURANCE STOCK

PETROLEUM STOCK LIST.

80

i io

payment of $8,000, the amount of the risk
tak^n, with interest and costs, satisfied their liability nn^er the policy.
The Court bdow directed a verdict for the plaint ft's for the unpaid balance of
$3.282 23; lrom this ruling defendant4* have appealed, on the cround that the
sum insured is the limit of their l ability, with the single exception of such
amount a? they may be bound to pay nnqer their agreement to contribute to
the

charges of protecting or recovering the Insured

object. Decision reserved.

Insurance.

Insurance.

Metropolitan
Insurance Company,

Marine Insurance.

Iosurance.

I

./Etna

Company,

Insurance

OF HARTFORD.

Charter Perpetual.

Incorporated 1819

$3,000,000.

CAPITA!.

J.

The

April 16,1867.

having reduced its capital according
to law, under the sanction of the Superintendent of the
Insurance Department to the sum of
This Company

HENDEE, President,

Liabilities

CATLIN &

Risks

on

Steamship Companies.

METROPOLITAN STEAMSHIP CO’S

Outside
Of

Directors s

ALEXANDER, Agent.

JAS. A.

Security Insurance Co.,
No. 119

NEPTUNE, NEREUS

INSURANCE.

A. F.

Frank W.

HASTINGS, President.

No.

Sailing on

INTERMEDIATE DAYS, from Pier 11,

North River, at 4 P.M., connecting at Boston with
Fitchburg, Boston <fe Lowell, Boston & Main*
and Eastern Railroads, and in New York with th©
Erie Railway.

Freights taken and rates given to and
the above roads and their

H. M. WHITNEY,

49 WALL

RUDOLPH GARRIGUE,

BUILDINGS)

John E. Kahl,

SAMUEL THOMPSON &
NEPHEWS’ Black Star Line or
Liverpool Packets, and National

STREET.

Incorporated 1841.

$1,614,540 78

Capital and Assets,

having recently added to its previous
)i J500,C
,000, and subscrip¬
cash capital of
of premiums of $300,000, continues
of insurance against Marine and In¬
land Navigation Risks. No Fire Risks disconnected
from Marine taken by the Company. Dealers are en¬
titled to participate in the profits.
MOSES H. GRINNELL, President.
JOHN P. PAULISON, Vice-President.
Isaac H. Walker, Secretary.

$1,261,349

Policy-holders,

this Company has paid to its

scrip, equivalent
of
TWENTY PER CENT.
Instead of issuing a scrip dividend to dealers, based
on the principle that all classes of risks are equally
Srofltable,
iseount from
this the
Company
current rates, when premiums are
paid, as the general experience of underwriters will
warrant, and the nett profits remaining at the close of

a rebatement on premiums in lieu of
in value to an average scrip dividend

$400,000 00

Gross Assets
Total Liabilities

$556,303 98
24,550 00

stockholders.

Ma¬

Sterling, at the

TRUSTEES.
D. C-olden Murray,
E. Haydcek White,
N. L. MoCready,
Daniel T. Willets,
L. Edgerton,
Henrj R. Kunhardt,
Henry Eyre,
Cornelius Grinnell,
John S. Williams,
Joseph Slagg,
William Nelson, Jr.,
Jas. D. Fish,
Charles Dimon,
Geo. W. Hennings,
A. William Heye,
Francis Hathaway,
Harold Dollner,
Aaron L. Reid,
Paul N. Spofford.

'

James Freeland,
Samuel Willets,
Robert L. Taylor,
William T. Frost,
William Watt,

Ellwood Walter.
ELLWOOD WALTER, President.
,

J.

_

CHAS. NEWCOMB,

De8pard, Secretary.

COMPANY.
No. 12 WALL STREET.
CASH CAPITAL

SURPLUS, JANUARY 1st, 1867

$1,000,000

278,000
per

cent.

President




SIA via

PANAMA.

The Panama, New-Zealand and Australian Royal
Mail Company dispatch a steamer on the 24th of
month from Panama to Wellington, N.Z., and the Aus¬
tralian Colonics, connecting with the steamer of the
Pacific Mail Steamship Company leaving
for Aspinwall (Colon) on
11th of each
First and second class passengers will he conveyed
under through ticket at the following rates:
New York to ports in New Zealand, or to Sydney or
Melbourne, $346 to $364 for first class, and $218 to $243
for second cl&ss.
The above rates include the transit across the Isthmus
of Panama, and the first class fares are for forward
cabins of the Australian steamer ; after cabin, latter

each

New-York
month.
From

the

Hope

Company,

Fire Insurance
OFFICE, No. 92

BROADWAY.

laslt Capital

Lssets,

This Company
pany.

22

March 9, 1866 - - 252,556

Losses Paid

-

-

-

-

iit> 1865

-

-

-

26,850 00
201,588 14

insures against Loss or Damage by

favorable terms as any

on as

§200,000 00

-

-

ONLY FIRST CLASS

Fire

other responsible Com¬

RISKS SOLICITED.

Board of Directors:

Thos. P. Cummings,
Robert Schell,

Taber,
Joseph Foulke,
Henrv M.

William II. Terry,

Steph. Cambreleng,

Fred. Schnehardt,
Joseph Grafton,
L. B. Ward,

Theodore W. Riley,
Jacob Reese,
Jno. W. Mersereau,
D.

$25 additional.

William Remsen,

Henry S. Levericb.
JACOB REESE, President.

Chas. D. Hartshorne,

Secretary.

States gold
to the newly-discovered gold

Fares payable in United

coin.

Special steamers run

region of Hokitika, New Zealand.
Children under three years, free; under eight years,
quarter fare ; under twelve years, half-fare ; male ser¬
vants, one-half fare; female do., three-quarters fare:
men servants berthed forward, women do., in ladies*
cabin.
A limited quantity of merchandise will be
under through bill of lading.
For further information, application to be made to
the Pacific Mail Steamship Company, No. 59 Wall st.,
Or to CHARLES W. WEST, Agent,
No. 23 William st., New York.

conveyed

PACIFIC MAIL

Joseph Britton,
Amos Robbins;

Lydig Suvdam,

8TEAM8HIP COMPANY’S

THROUGH LINE

To

California,
And Carrying:

RANCE COMPANY

OF NEW YORK.

CASH ASSETS, September 1st, 1866, over $16,000,000 00.
FREDERICK S. WINSTON, President.
R. A. McCURDY,

Secretaries

Vice-President.

Actuary, Sheppard Homans.

The North American Life
INSURANCE COMPANY.
Will Remove to their New Offices,
on

The office

now

of Barclay st.,

May 1st.

occupied by them, 63

Street, corner Cedar

is to Rent.

(except when those dates

for SAN

FRANCISCO, touching at

faill on

ACAPULCO.

1st—Arizona, connecting with Golden City.
11th—Henry Chauncey, connecting with St. Louis
21st—New York, connecting with Sacramento.

Departures of 1st and

REMOVAL.

229 Broadway, corner

list of every month

Sunday, and then on the preceding Saturday), for
ASPINWALL, connecting, via Panama Railroad,
with one of the Company’s steamships from Panama
JUNE:

| jo^C m “tJIrt.

the United

Mail,
LEAVE PIER NO. 42 NORTH RIV¬
ER, FOOT j 1 Canal street, at 12
o’clock noon, on the 1st, 11th, and
States

The Mutual Life Insu-

Char-

Losses

Notkan, Secretary.

Secretary.

J. Remsen Lane,

Vice-President.

Niagara Fire Insurance

WALCOTT, President.

BETWEEN

TION

156,303 98

BENJ. S.

makes such cash abatement or

the year, will he divided to the
This Company continues to make Insurance on
rine and Inland Navigation and Transportation Risks,
on the most favorable terms, including Risks on Mer¬
chandise of all kinds, Hulls, and Freight.
Policies issued making loss payable in Gold or Cur¬
rency, at the Office in New York, or in
Office of Rathbone, Bros. & Co., in Liverpool.

COMMUNICA¬
NEWAUSTRALA¬
YORK AND

STEAM

capital
Surplus

Total Liabilities

IN CASH,

supplied with'Sterling drafts and through tickets from
the Old Country to any part of the United States.

STREET.

Cash

ORGANIZED APRIL, 1S44.
During the past year

way,corner of Rector Street (formerly 275 Pearl Street).
Sight Drafts on the Royal Bank of Ireland,
all its Branches, and on C. GrimshawT
payable in any part of England and

January 1st, 1866..

The Mercantile Mutual
1867

Line of Liverpool and Queenstown
sailing every week. Passage office 73 Broad-

COMPANY,
No. 45 WALL

advance

Assets, January 1st,

Steamers,

Fire Insurance

Hanover

This Company
assets a paid up
tion notes in
to issue policies

INSURANCE COMPANY.
No. 35 WALL STREET, NEW YORK.

President.

Secretary.

Agent,
Wharf, Boston.

End of Central

COMPANY.
(INSURANCE

from all point©

connections.

charge for wharfage in Boston.
WM. P. CLYDE, Agent and Gen’l Snp’t,
104 Wall St., and Pier 11, North River.

$740,482 43

TOTAL ASSETS

SANFORD,

(1,000 tons each,)

No

240,482 43

SURPLUS* Jan. 1st, 1867

Mutual Insurance

ASHLAND, MIA MI andM.

$500,000 00

CAPITAL,

SATURDAYS,

and

on

175,BROADWAY, N. Y.

Ballard, Secretary.
CASH

Sun

Co.,

Germania Fire Ins.

and GLAUCUS,

Sailing TUESDAYS, THURSDAYS and

Lorrain Freeman,
Edward A Stansburv,
J. Boorman Johnston,
Samuel D. Bradford,
W. R. WADSWORTII^Secretary.

($1,000,000.)
FIRE AND INLAND

Steamers.

(2,000 tons each,)

One million Dollars,

Capital,

Cash

BROADWAY,

Joseph B. Varnum,

Neptune

Line

COMPRISING

F. H. Wolcott,
15
P. W. Turney,
William T. Blodgett.
Charles P. Kirkland,
Watson E. Case,
John A. Graham,
John C.* Henderson,
James L. Graham,
Clinton B. Fisk.

Martin Bates,
Dudley B. Fuller,
Franklin II. Delano,
Gilbert L. Beeckman,

Daily.

For Boston

OBERT M. C. GRAHAM,
Y ice-President.

I

STREET.

WALL

SATTERTHWAITE, Agents,

Metropolitan

TAMES LORIMER GRAHAM
President.

NEW YORK AGENCY

62

Cargo only, at the office in the

Ban!’ Building.

FIRE.

23.

adjusted and paid

61 William Street.

confine its fire business to the city
vicinity, and will also write Marine

of New York and

INSURANCE AGAINST LOSS AND DAMAGE BY

NO.

8, 1867, $1,763,287

Assets, JTan.

intends hereafter to

1867,~$4,478,100 74
394,976 96

CAPITAL $500,000.

Risks made binding and losses
in New York.

$300,000,

GOODNOW, Secretary.

Assets January 1,

Company of North
America, of Philadelphia.

Insurance

INCORPORATED 1794.

BROADWAY.

108

NO.

NEW YORK,

L. J.

731

THE CHRONICLE.

8,1867.J

Juno

21st connect at Panama with
1st and 11th for
1st touch at Man¬

steamers for South Pacific ports:
Central American Ports. Those or
zanillo.

Baggage cnecKed

through. One hundred pounds

allowed each adult.
An experienced Surgeon on board.
attendance free.
For passage tickets or further
at the Company’s ticket office, on the

Medicines and

information, apply
wharf, foot of
n North River, New York.
William Canal street,
F. R. BABY Agept,
’■

PRICES CURRENT.
the duties noted

py* In addition to

below, a discriminating duty of 10 per
cent, ad val. is levied on all imports
under

flags that have

reciprocal

no

treaties wttk the United States.
On all goods, wares, and
chandise, of the growth or
Countries East of the Cape of

mcr

produce of
Good

imported from places this
side of the Cape of Good Hope, a duty
of 10 per cent, ad val. is levied in ad¬
dition to the duties imposed on any such
articles when imported directly from the
place or places of their growth or produc¬
tion ; Ruw Cotton and Raw Silk excepted.
The tor in ail vases to be 2,240 fl).
Anchor®—Duty: 2±cent? ^ lb,
012099) and upward^ lb
y @ 1C
Ashes—Duty: 15 $ cent ad val.
Pot, 1st sort...# 100 9) .... @ 8 75
Pearl, 1st sort.
18 lO @ ...
Beeswax—Duty,20 cent ad val.
American yellow. $ 9)
41 @ 42
Bones—Duty: on invoice 10 $ ct.
Rio Grande shin $ toU45 00 @47 50
Hope, when

Bread—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.

$5>

Pilot

8

@

..

@ 6|
91 @ 14

Nary

.

Crackers.

Breadstuf fs—See special report.
Bricks.
Common
Croton

hard, .per

M.10 00 (fall 00
16 10 @17 fcO

@66 00
Bristles—Duty, 15 cents; hogs hair
'1 # 9>.
Amer’n,gray &wh. $9> 55 @2 00
Batter and Cheese.—Duty: 4
Philadelphia Fronts

cents.
Butter—
•k

XJ1-U’ Kill LUUO

'tP xw

t-

Welsh, tubs $ lb.
Fine to extra Sta < .old
4
Good 1 o flre fctate, G
"W e sh tubs,
4%

©
@
H ©

lb 10 @

.

Dairies

17 ©

18

@
©
10 @

16
13
15

14

16

do

Common....

.

.

Candles—Duty, tallow, 2±; sperma¬
ceti and wax a; it earine and ada¬
mantine, 5 cents $1 9).
8perm,patent,. ..$9) 45 @ so

40
81
211
Cement—Rosendale^b)....@ 1 75
Chains—Duty, 2* cents $ 9).
One inch & upward^ 9)
9@
Coal—Duty, bituminous, $ 1 25 $ ton
of 28 bushels 80 9) to the bushel;
other than bituminous.40 cents
2b
Refined sperm, city...
Btearic
Adamantine

bushels of 80 9) ^

38 @
30 @
18 @

bushel.

Liverpool Orrel. $ ton
of2,240 9>
Liverp’l House Cannel
Anthracite..
Cardiff steam

@
@

....

...

6 60 @ 7 00

@1 * 00
@15 < 0
Newcastle Gas obSteamlO 00 @iu 60
Cocoa-Duty, 3 cents $ 9).
Liverpool Gas Caon^l

Caracas
*

(In

bondXgold)

Maracaibo do

..(gold)

19 ©
..

@

Guayaquil
do ...(gold) l'|@
8t. Domingo—(gold)
94@

21
13*
10

Coffee.—See special report.

CoFPer—Duty» P1?*
and Ingot,
2|; old copper 2 cents 18 9); manu¬
factured, 35 18 cent ad val.; sheathing
copper and yellow metal, in sheets42
inches long and 14 inches wide,
weighing 14 @ 34 oz. $ square loot,
3 cents $ 9).
Sheathing, new.. 18 9)
Sheathing, yellow

Bolts

Braziers’
Baltimore
Detroit
Portage Lake

81 @

36

a*
?5
35

3!

©
@
@
'i i@
23| @

33

24
--

Cordage—Duty, tarred, 8; u ntarred
Manila, 2J- other untarred, 3J- cents
# 9>

Manila,

Tarred Russia
Tarred American .....
Bolt Rope, Russia.....

22
..

..

..

@
©
@>

23

©

22

Cork®—Duty, 50 $ cent ad val.
Regular, quarts5# gross 55 @
Mineral

Phial.

..

50 @
12 @

1*«

19*

TO
70
40

Colton—See special report.
Drags and Dyes—Duty, Alcohol,
S 60 per

gallon; Aloes, 6 cents $ 9>;

Alum, 60 cents $ 100 Jt>; Argols, 6
cent#
9); Arsenic f \Assafcedati,
*0; Antimony, CruJ * id Regulus,
10: Arrowroot, 80.
^nt ad val.;

Baisam Copalvl, SO^^Kfssm Tola, 30 j
Bahaai Peru, 60 oust* h *1 CsWefiJii




and Oil Berga¬

18 cent ad val.; Opium, $2 5u; Oxalic
Acid, 4 cents 18 9); Phosphorus, 20
$ cent ad val.; Pruss. Potash, Yel¬
low, 5; Red do, 10; Rhubarb, 50cents
$ 9): Quicksilver, 15 18 cent ad
val.; Sal ASratus, 14 cents 18 lb ; Sal
Soda, 4 cent 18 9); Sarsaparilla and
Senna, 2o $ cent ad val.; Shell Lac,
10; Soda ABh, 4 ; Sugar Lead, 20cents
$ 9); Sulph. Quinine, 45 18 cent ad
val.; Sulph. Morphine, $2 50 $ oz.;
Tartaric Acid, 20; Verdigris, 6 cents
18 9»; Sai Ammoniac, 20; blue Vit¬
riol, 25 18 cent ail val.; Etherial Pre¬
parations and Extracts, $1 $ 9); all
others quoted below; fuze.
Acid, Citric.... (gold)

574@

Alcohol

4

i d b x.d

Argols, Crudes
Argols, Refined
Arsenic, Powdered....
Assafustida
Balsam Copaivi
Balsam Tolu...
Balsam Peru
Bark Petayo

#

^

4

66 @

25

1' @
IS @
834@

124

Rhubarb, China.(gold)
Salaratus
SalAm’n ac, Ref (gold)
Sal Soda. Newcastle...

ton

$ 9>
Brimstone,

I lor

Senna, Eastlndia
SbeVl Lac
Soda Ash (6U$c.)(g.ld)
Busjar L’d, WY(god)..

Cantharides

85

Salmon, Pickled,

@

4

..@
@

5

8 oo
2 17
80
<-2
9
20
14
90
90

Chamomile Flow’s^9)
Chlorate Potash (gold)
Caustic Soda
Carraway Seed

Coriander Seed

Cochineal, lion (gold)
Cochineal, M exic’n(g’d)

Ginseng, South&West.
Gum Arabic, Picked..
Gum Arabic, Sorts...
Gum Benzoin ..(gold)
Guiu Kowrie....
Gem Gedda
Gum Damar

.(gold)

10

00

85

@

80
88

@

65

80

@

86

25
40

@
@

27
41

@
65 @

6">

@
80 @

28
50

.

60 @

uo

1

'•5 @ 8 80
50

@
@ 44 66
90 @
*65
25 @
31 @
24 @
25

...

42

84 @
30 @
7 @

*74
do, French, EXF.F.do
Manna, large flake
1 6>> @ i’r> 6
Manna, small flake.... 1 60 @ 1
S @
12
Mustard Seed, Cal....
14 @ .
Mustard Seed, Trieste.
37
Nutgalla Blue Aleppo 85 @
.

Oil Anis 4
Oil Cassia..

-

Oil Bergamot

iZ

Hardware—
A.'.es—Cast steel, best
btand
perdoz
do
ordinary...

66

do
*

5 0)
4 50 dh 6
8 75
9$0
$ $0

;

brown.

do

do House

Fisher,
Fox, Silver

!L*

Lynx

Dark
do pale
Mink, dark
Marten,

.-

Alusk rat,

Otter'
e

Opossum
Raccoon
Skutik, Black

Door L ct s and Latches List 7|
dia
Door Knobs—Mineral. 1 ist
% uis,
“
List 7* % dis
Pore-lain
Padlocks
Npw List 25&7* % dis
.

Locks—Cabinet, Eagle
Trunk
Stocks and Dies
Screw Wrencues—Coe’s
,

^

6 00 @i2 00

2 00 @ 8 00

75
(0
00
00
00
80
00

2 00 @ 4
5 00 @20
2 00 @ 5
3 00 @ 6
8 @
6 00 @ 8
15 @ 80
30 @ 60
80 @ 75

14; over that, and

16x24, 2; over that, and not
24x30 ,24 ; all over that, 3 cents

not over

$ 9).

Window—1st,2d, 3d, and 4th
qualities.

American

Subject to a discount of 85 ' nd 598 cent.
6x 8 to 8x10. .18 50 ft 7 25 @ 6 50
12x19 to 16x24
18x22 to 20x30
20x31 to 24x30
24x31 to 24x36
25x36 to 30x44
80x46 to 32x48
32x50 to 82x56
Above

...

#* 0

00
60
00
50

00
00
00
00
20 00 @18 00
24 00 @15 00

English and French Window—1st,
3d. and 4th qualities,

List 7£&5 % dis
List ou % dis

CutTacks
Cut Brads

28

@ 6
@ 6
@ 7
@ 7
@ 9
16 00 @l(j
17 OO @11
18 00 @12

List
20% dis
55@6U % dis,

in sets
List 40 %adv
Augur Bitts
List 20& 10 % dis
Short Augurs,per dz.NewList 20% dis,
Riup
"do
List 20 % dis

40
21
5 00 @ 6 00

7 75
9 25
9 50
11 75
14 60

List

List 10£ dis
List 80 £ dis

$ 9) z0 @ 22
Framing Chisels.NewListaTi u u %di g
Firmer do insets.
Iist40%adv
<10
do
handled,

Window, not exceeding lOx

8x-> to 10x15
1 lx 5* to 12x18

Patent

do Tuft’s
Sin ths’ Vis-s

unpolished Cylinder, Crown, and

over

List 15 % oi8

“

inches, 20 cents 18 square foot; all
above that, 40 cents 18 square foot;

15Inches square,

List 11; &uv,
List.

.

square foot; larger and not over 24
x39 inches 6 cents 18 square foot;
above that, and not exceeding 24x60

Common

$5@^ less 20 j
Wrought Butts List 5 % dis
per saw...

Hinge^rou^ht,
List 5 % adv,
Door B< Its, Cast Bbl
L;st2U£dis
Carriage and Tire do List 40@6) % die

Glass—Duty, Cylinder or Window
Polished Plate not over 10x15 inches,
24 cents $ square foot; larger aud
not over 16x24 inches, 4 cents $

on

Gins,

Narrow
Cast Butts—Fast Joint.
*k
Loose Joint..

@

50 @

27

25

Shingling Hatchets, O’t
steel, best br’ds, Nos.

Cotton

3 00 @ 5 00
1 00 @ 1 60

do Cross
do Red
dc Grey

ordinary

’dig.

60 @ 1 00
50 @ 75.
10 @ 20
4 00 @ 8 00
5 Otf @50 00

Badger
Cat, Wild

@
@
21 @

1 to 3
*8 00 @ 9 po
do ordinary
6 17 @ 7 50
Broad match’s 8to3bstJ5 50 @15 oO
do udi *ary
12 • 0 @
Coffee Mil s
ListlC %
do iiri Hopper
@
do Wood Baca
@

$ cent.
Beaver,Dark..skin 1 00 @ 4 00
Pale
do
60 @ 2 00

Bear, Black

17
15

@

13
24

.

@1» 25
@19 25
@ls 00
@18 (-0
@14 00
@i4 50
@ ....
@
@ .

16 @

lft

Carpe • tor’s Adzes,....

Fruits—See special report.

is

..

.

F«rs— Du-y,10

44

£5 (m

$ 9>

Jersey

23
36
19

@

1

72

18 @

Fla.x—Duty: $15 18 ton.

924

60
7

No.1.37 00

H kled. p. tc

Herring, Scaled^ box.
Herring, No. 1
Herring, pickled^bbl.

25
95

..

(gold)
Hyd. Potash, Fr. and
Eng..-.
(gold) 8
Iodine, Resublimed... 6

Madder, Dutch.

83

@
®
@
10* @
n @
80 @

llakey

Licorice Paste,Calabria
Lioorice, Paste, Sicily.
Licorice Paste Spanish
Solid
Licorice Paste, Greek.

45

-

Gum Tragacanth,Sorts
Gum Tragacanth, w.

lalap

39
25

..

Gum,Myrrh, Turkey.
Gum Sehegal ...(g« ld)

Lav Dye

1 70

2 8*@

Myrrh,East. India

Ipecacuanha, Brazil...

284
.

Sa mon,

n®

Copperas, American ..
Cream Tarar, pr.(gold)
Cubebs, East India....
Cutch
Epsom Salts
Extract Logwood
Feuneh Se d
Flowers,Benzoin. 18 oz.
Gambier

Gamboge

....

35

@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@

....

@20 50

shore

Mackerel,No.l,Halifax
Mackerel, No. J, Bay

4i@
81 @

is

_

Sporting, in 1 9) canis¬
ters 18 9)
86 @ 1 06
Hair—Duty free.
33 @
KioGrande,mixed18
*1 @
Buenos Ayres,mixed
10 @
Hog, Western, unwash.

@

18 @

1

45

Fisli—Duty, Mackerel, $2; Herrings,
$1 ; Salmon $3; other pickled, $1 50
V bbl.; on other Fish, Pickled, Smok¬
ed, or Dried,in smaller pkgs.than bar¬
rels, 50 cents 18 iUO 9).
Dry Cod
18 cwt. 6 37$@ 6 50
Pickled Scale...$ bbl. 0 25 @ 5 50
Pickled Cod.... $ bbl. 6 60 @ 7 0o
Mackerel,No. J, Mass

o

25

@

20

@116 00

(gold)

5
10

.

less S9),6 cents $ 9>, an
$ cent ad val.; over 20cents
9), 10 cents 18 9) and 20 $ cent ad v
Blasting(A)
259) keg .. @4 00
Shipping and Mining.. .. @4 50
6 60 @
Rifle

cents or

25 00 @ *’!*
Logwood, Hon.
80 00 @
T.ogwiod, Laguna (gold) ... @
Logwood, St. D< min..i0 00 @1 00
Logwood, Cam.(gold)
@
Logwood,Jamaica go 14 0> @16 00
Lima wood
Barwood

00
00
00

powder—Duty, valued at 20

Gun

2b

31 U0 @ 82
@

Fustic, Savanilla
Fustic, Maracaibo

60
00
50
00
00

..

2*

Woods—Duty free.
Camwood. .(gold)18 t nleO 00@

@

95 @
60 @

4)

Dye

Fustic,Cuba.

to 16x24.
to 24x80
to 24x86
to 30x44.
to 32x48.
to 32x-56

25 @ 6
75 @ 7
50 @ 7
50 @12
50 @18
00 @15
50 @16
00 @18

Calcutta, light & h’y %
20f @ 21
Gunny Clotlx—Duty, valued at 1C
cents or less 18 square yard, 3; ovei
10,4 cents 18 9).
Calcutta, standard, y’d
@
23|

.

38
80

i8 uu @
Ravens, Heavy
Hootch, G’ck, No.l ^y
@
18 y.
Cotton,No. 1
66 @

-

Carbonate
Ammonia,
in bulk
Cardamoms, Malabar..
Castor Oil Cases 18 gal

Light.. 18 pee 16 00 @

Raven a,

Rollr

Camphor, *>i;de, (In
bond)
(gold)
Camphor, liefined

,

Duck—Duty, 30 $ cent ad val.

:'.5

..

*

.

.

@
Sulphate Morphine.... 6 75 @
61
@
Tart’c Acid..(g’ld) 189)
11 @
Tai»ioca—
@
Verdigris, dry5 ex dry
10 @
Vitriol, Blue

Mackerel, No. 2, Bay..
..
Mackerel, No. 2, Ha ax 17 25
Mac’el,No.3,Mass. l’gel * 50
Mackerel, No. 8, H’faxl3 0U
Mackerel, No. 3, Mass

phur

.

2 W

Sulp Quinine, Am^ oz

'46

..

Sul-

.

.

,

8
9
10
15
16
18
.20
24

to 10x15
to 12x18.

Groceries—See special report.
Gunny Bag;®—Duty, valued at 1(
cents or less, 18 square yard, 3; ove
10, 4 cents # 9>

•

22

©'
43 @
27 @
18 @
•l 3 @
24©
27 @
..

Senna, Alexandria....

$
(gold).38 50 @40 00

Brimstone, Am.

85 @

6<»
38 @
...

»

O'©

Sarsaparilla, Bond
Sarsaparilla, Mex
Seneca Root.

8

7 @
20 @

Sago, Pei. led

20
55

2 @
25 @
75 @
1 25 @
@

80
@
2 75 @ 8 50
IS

Quicksilver

85

34@

castle
gold
Bi Chromate Potash...

Bleaching Powder
Borax, Reliued
Brimstone. Crude

21

75 @

#

..

Feathers—Duty: 30 $ centad val.
Prime Western...18 9)
i 0@
78 @
Tennessee
80

60
ro

@

<

-20 @

Berries, Persian
Bi Carb. Soda, New¬

Gum

...

18 9); Oil Peppermint, 50

Annato, good to prime. •
Antimony, Regulus of

.

20
IS
lft
12

lft @
u ftb

cents; Oil Cassia

mot, $1

Alum

21

50

l

C itnmoD St vt-3,
(«
W* tern B liter,
Grease bu ter, nrk. ^
Cheese—

.

..

)enzola and Gamboge, 10 18 cent.;
Ginseng, 20; Gum Arabic, 20 $ cent
ad val.; Gum Benzoin, Gum Kowrie, and Gum Damar, 10 cents per 9);
Gum Myrrh, Gum
Senegal, Gum
Geeda and Gum Tragacanth, 20 18
cent ad val.; Hyd. Potash and Resub¬
limed Iodine, 75; Ipecac and Jalap,
50; Lie. Paste, 10; Manna, 25; Oil
Anis, Oil Lemou, and Oil Orange,
50

.

Logwood, Flowers

9); Extract

8x11
11x14
12x19
20x31
24x31
24x36
80x45
82x50

4 00 @ 4 25
OH Lemon
Oil Peppermint, pure. 5
Opium, Turkey.(gold) 6 75 @ 7 25
btt
86 @
Oxalic Acid
90 @
Phosphorus
35
@
Prussiate Potash

Bark, 80 # cent ad val.; Bi Carb. Sod
11; Bi Chromate Potash, 3 cents $ 9)
Bleaching Powder, 80 cents
1009)
Retiued Botht, 10 cents $ 9); Crude
Brimstone, $6; Roll Brimstone, $10
18 ton; Flor Sulphur,$20 $ ton, and
15 $ cent ad val.; Crude < amphor,
30; Refined Camphor, 40cents
9).;
Carb. Ammonia, 20 $ cent ad val.;
Cardamoms and Cantharides, 50 cents
$ 9); Caster Oil, $1 $ gallon ; Chlo¬
rate
Potash, 6; Caustic Soda, 14;
Citric Acid, 10; Copperas, 4; Cream
Tartar, 10; Cubebs, 10 cents <# 9);
Cutch, 10; Chamomile Flowers, 20
cent ad val.; Epsom Salts, i cent

Aloes, Cape
$ 9)
Aloes, Socotrine

33
30
23

30 @
2’ @
20 @

ew.

Factory

[June 8, 1867.

THE CHRONICLE.

732

2d,

totallywfan 7 75 © # 9$

kivet-, Iron

List 85&40 % dis,

Screws American...
do
English

List 25@30 % dia

Planes

61 @ ? 4 # 9)
List 30@35 %ad?

Shovels and
Horse Shoes

List 10&5%dis

Spades...

List ft % dia

Hay—North River, in bales|J 100 9>s
for shipping
1 5 @ ....
Hemp—Duty, Russian, $40; Manila
$25; Jute, $15; Italian, $40; Sunn
and Sisal, $15 18 ton; and Tampico
1 cent $ 9).
Amer. Dressed.

18 ton 870 C0@885 0(

Undressed.. 275 0(»@280 Gfi

do

8 5 00@:i50 (0
....(gold) 105 00@li5 00
9)..(gold)
..
@
12

Russia, Clean
Jute
Manila.. 18

Sisal .........»-•.....
13 (Sh
Hides-Duty, all kinds, Dry or Salt¬
ed and Skins 10 18 cent ad val.
..

Hides—

Drv

Put-nos Ayres18 9>g’d
Montevideo
do

20 @
19 ©

Kio Grande

do

l8j@
I8i@

jy

rtrinoeo

do

174@
ym
Is @

18

California
gold
California, Mex. do
Porto Cabello
do
do
Vera Cruz
..

do

Tampico

do

Texas

Dry Salted Hides—

(gold)

eh 11....
t
llfornia...

.

Tamp co

.

-

do

do

South & Wes’-, do
Wet Salted Hides—
Buo Ayres.$ 9) g’d.
Rio Grande .... do

California

do

Western

14

@
16i©
164@
14 @
13 @
..

@

1 *4©

10 @

vm
10m

J'i©
11

Coutrysl’ter trim. &
cured.

City

do

Upper Leather

do

Rio Gr. Kip
18 9: cash.
Sierra Leone ... do
Gambia & Bisson do
B. A. &

iii@

Stock—
28 @
29 @

23 @

Honey-Duty, 2 sent $ gal Ion.
Cuba (in bond) (gc1
18 gall.
©

Hops—Duty; 5 ecu*5 W tt>.
Crop of 1866
£ fi>
45
do of 1865
90
Foreljx 4iti •'»*% . OIO 40

Para, Medium
Para, Coarse...
East Inaia

Carthagena, Ac
Indigfo—Duty frek.
Oude
Madras

70

55

Pig,

American,No. 1..42 00 @ 43 OJ
Bar, Refl’d c.ng& Amer d9 0 @ yu 00
Bar, Swedes, assorted -

Pig,

95 00(g) 100 00
Stork Pricks—,

Swedes, assorted

Bar

@155 00

sizes

Bar,English and Amer¬
102
ican, Refined
do
do
do Common 92
Scroll
13 >
Ovals and Half Round leO

50@107 50
50@ 92 5
00@’82 (0
C0@140 00
Band
@135,0
HorseShoe...,
130 00@ —
Rods, 5-H@3-16 inch.. 107 50@167 50
Hoop

$ lb

Nail Rod

Sheet, Russia
Sheet, Single,
and Treble

140 O0@i95 00
9 @
lt»i
13i@ 19

5}@
S
ton 5' 0 @ .*4 0 *
82 50@ S5 00

Ivory—Duty, 10 $ cent ad val.
East India, Prime $ft 3 U0@ 8 2*
East Ind Billiard Ball 8 00@ 3 50
,

African, Prime..

8 00@ 3 87

..

Scrivel.,W.C. 1 fc0@ 2 50
Lead—Duty, Pig, $2 $ 100 ft ; Old
Lead, 11 cents $ ft; Pipe and Sheet,
21 oents $ lb.
*
Galena
$ 100 ft
..
@
African,

Spanish
German

(eold) 6 £0 @ 6 02}

........(gol I) 6 £0 @ 6 621

(gold) 6 56 @ 6 87}

English

net

Bar...

@10 00

..

net .. @10 25
Leather-Duty: sole 35, upper 80
Pipe and Sheet

$ oent ad val.

<—cash.$ ft.—,

Oak, Slaughter,
do
do

do
do
do
do
do

light

.

middle
heavy.

,

light Cropped....
middle do
....
....
bellies do
Heml’k, B. A.,&c.,l’t.
do middle.
do
do
do heavy .
do
Califor., light.
do
do middle.
do
do heavy.
do
Orino., etc. l’t.
do
do middle
do
do heavy.
do
do & B. A,

dam’gd all w’g’s

do
Slangh.inroufirh
do poor

do
do

Oak,

Slaughiin rou.,l’t

do
and heavy

do

do

mid.

8i @

Lumber^
.
*

40

47 @
i9 @

29 @

V9 @
29 @
S8}@
29 @
28}@
2s @
28}@
27 @

24 @
19 @
87 @

89 @

36 @
38 @
..
..

261
239
41
40
45

val.

@ 1 2i
@ 1 70

val.; Rosewood

# M ft 19 00 @ 29 flO

Southern Pine
80
White Pine Box B’ds 80
White Pine

Merch.

Clear Pine
Laths, Eastern.

Poplar and

00 @ 85 00
00 @ ....

38 00 @ 85 00

Box Boards

80 00 @100 00
$ M 8 V5 @

Wni c

wood B’ds & Pl’k. 55 00 @ 65 00
Cherry B’ds A Plank 80 00 @ 90 00
Oak and Ash
60 00 @ 65 00
Maple and Birch ... 85 00 @ 40 00

Blaok Walnut
STAVES—
White
oak,
ext*a
do
do
do

do
do
do
do
do
do
do
do

nhd., extra.
hhd., heavy

hhd.,light.
hhd.,oull8.
bbl., extra.
bbl.,heavy.

do

..

..

..

..
..

..

~

hhd.,light..

_

HEADING —White
oak, hhd

Hahoganyt Cedar,
Wood—Duty tree.
Mahogany St. Domin-




fOterotc&ostVft**

@250 00
@200 00

@175
@140
@110
@ 60
@180
@ 90

..

^

@180 00

@100 0 0

..

hh<L,h’vy.

@300 00
@250 00
@200 00

@12*00

..

bbl., light

bbl.,culls..

$ ft

6

4 @

42 @

(2S0 lbs.)

Spirits turp., Am. $ g.

...

and whale or other fish (for

ad val.
....

60 @

J0}@
11)
Linseed,oity..gall. 1 8t @ 1 40
70 @
Whale
75
do refined winter..
85 @
do

do

Lead, red,City
do white, American,

l-*@

puro, in oil
do while, American,

@

00
00
00
00
00
00

@150 00
Rose-

** O

i

whi e,
oil

Ochre,yellow, French,
dry
$ *00 ft
do
gr\: in oil.'{8 ft

Spanish brown, dry $
100 ft

do

131
11

14 @

15

Whiting, Amer
2@
Vermilion,Chinese^ ft 1 25 @ 1
do
Trieste
1 05 @ 1
do
Cal. & Eng.. 1 26 @ 1
-5 @
do
American....

24

Venet. red (N.C.)$cwt 2 75
Carmine,cityinade$Mbl6 ftO
China clay
$ ton34 00
Chalk
....$ bbL 4 00
Chalk, block....$ ton0^.
Chrome yellow...^ ft
15

over

Chagres ...gold

..

Puerto Cab .gold

@

..

@

^ ft.

Vaptha, refined

21 @

21}

•

.

, ,

1S4

6|
10

II, 3 cts

1* @

Jft

American, spring

J2 @

15

19 @

I0*@
ll|@

19J
20

18,@

16

$ ton.. J50 00 @225 00

Sicily

....

20
80

practiced.”

to the

United States is 32 cents

less $ ft, 10 cents
cent, ad val. ; over
cents $ ft and 10
Class 3 .—Carpet

^

32 c*-nts $ ft, 12
$ cent, ad val.
Wools and other
si*’dlar Wools—The value whereof at
the last place whence exported to the
United States is 12 cents or less #
1b, 3 cents $ 1b ; over 12 cents $ ft,
6 cents ^ lb.
Wool of all classes
imported scoured, three times the
duty as if importedjinwashed.
62} @ 75
Amer., Sax. fleece <gi ft
54 @ 68
do
full bl’d Merino,
do 4 and J Merino..
CO @ 55
Extra, pulled
50 @ 55
40 @ 60
Superfine
No. 1, pulled
80 @ 87
80 @ 85J
California, unwashed,
24 @ 27
do
common...,
Peruvian, unwashed...

Valparaiso, unwashed..
S. Amer. Mestiza, unw..
do
commoD,w...
Entre Rios, washed....
8. American Cordova

African, unwashed
do

Tin—Duty; pig, bars, and block,15 $

Plate and sheets and
plates, 25 per cent, ad vat
val.

$ ft (gold)
(gold)

?5)@
2o @

26

@ 22J
Plates,char. I.C.%1 box 1° 09 @18 0*
(gold)

English
41}

do
do
do

Paris—Duty: lump,free;

..

1*» 5ft @12 25
Terne Charcoalll 50 @12 00
Terne Coke.... 9 25 @ 9 0
I. C. Coke

Tobacco.—See special report.

oaloined, 20 $ cent ad val.
Blue Nova Scotia# tox
... @ 4 00
White Nova Scotia.... 4 50 @ .. .
Calcined, eap*ern$ bbl .... @ 2 40
Calcined city mills
@ 2 50

Liquors—Liquors
—Duty: Brandy, first proof, $8 per
gallon^ other liquors, $2.50 Winks—
Duty: value net over 50 cents
gal¬

Wines and

Provisions—Duty: beef and pork,
1 ct; lams, bacon, andlard,2 ts $ ft.

lon 20 oents >> gallon and 25 $ cent
ad valorem; over fit. and not over 100,
50 cents $ gallon and 25 $ oent ad

""

•

■

valorem; over $1 $ gallon, $1$ galIon and 25

fl oent ad val.

@
@
@

40

40
80

@

20 @
80 @

....

_

washed

40

20 @
26 @
85 &

washed

29
80
58

Zinc—Duty: pig or block, $1 50 »
100 lbs.; sheets 24 cents $1 ft.
ft
U @ 11}
Sheet
Freights—
To Livkrpool :
Cotton
$1 ft
Flour
....$ bbl.
Petroleum

Heavy goods... $ ton

d.
5-3

s.

s.
....

.@18
--@40
0
@20 0
..
@
2}
@
n
..@16
..@10
..

7 6 @10
..

..

..

To London :

ton 12 6 @15 0

Heavy goods.

Teas.—See special report

33
88
80
84
85

@
@
@

85
36

Mexican, unwashed
Smyrna, unwashed ....
do

_

18
80
28
82
80

Texas

Tallow—Duty :1 cent $ 1b.
American,prime, coun¬
try and city $ ft...
11 @

11)

or

$ 1b and 11 $

Wheat, bulk and bags
Beef
$ tee.
Pork
$ bbl.

Banca
Straits

.

Class 1 —Clothing

Oil

teroe

,

# ct off list
# ct off list.
V et* off list*

Corn, b’k& bags$ bus.

ad

, ,

60 00
9 DO
25 00

Sugar.—See special report

cent

#

4 75

cases.

..

German
c.n cast

4 50

8

._

Sumac—Dutv: 10 $ cent ad val.

$ bbl. 8 75 @ 4 00

3eof,plain messbbl..14 50

9]@

hnglisn machinery

gallon

26

61

3| cents $ ft
(Store prices.)
.
18 @
23

English blister

@ 4 ?*)
@23 0i

@

58

6j@

7 cents and not above

English, spring

@ 8 00
@20 oo
@35 00

2 m

18 @

domestic

Amer

8ft

Refined, free
in bond
do

57|

,

$ ft; over 11 cents,
and 10 $ cent ad val.

SO

16

31
57|

Steel—Duty: bars and Ingots, valued
at 7 cents $ ft or under, 24 cents

35
10

Crude,40@47grav. $ gal.

Old

@

.

•>

place whence exported to the United
States is 32 ceuts or less $ ft, 10
ceucs $ ft and 11 $ cent, ad val.:
over 32 cents $ 1b, 12 cents
1b and
10 $ cent, ad val ; when imported
washed, double these rates. Class
2.— Comoing jroo£s--The value where¬
of at the last place whence exported

^2j

Spices. —See special report.

Petroleum—Duty: crude, 20 cents;

do mass

..

.

•

IFoofo—The value whereof at the last

85

..

Vera Oruz .gold

do

@ 85
39 00 @42 00

do extra mesa.

@
55 @
56 @
6l @

Bolivar

plates, $! 50 ^100 fts^
Platea,foreign $ ft gold

9

8'4

Plaster

...gold
Honduras..gold
do Sisal
gold
do Para..... ..gold

..

Spelter—Duty: in pigs, bars, and

y

2

Residuum

62*@

Castile

1 12 @ 1 25

8@
gr’d in oil. $ ft
No.l$H00ft 2 75 @

refined, 40 jents

Deer,SanJuan^ftguid

cent ad val.

2 09 @ 2 EO

Paris wh.,

@’

41 @
J3 @
42, @
28 @

English, cast, $ ft

8@

fore

42*
4-'*

Soap—Duty: 1 cent $ ft, and25 $

-

10 @

41 @

.

•

85
Telegraph, No. 7 to 11
Plain
8@
# ft
10
Brass (less 20 p r ceat )
47 @
Copper
do
.
57 @
Wool—Duty : Imported in the “ or¬
dinary condition as now and hereto

37|

84 @

Tampico. ..gold
Matamoras.gold
Payta
gold
Madras,
gull
Cape
;g. H

do
do
do

10

9l@

French, in

Fork,mess, new

50

42

A...gold

VeraCruz .told

.

*

80

do
do

val.
No. 0 to 18 ..
No. 19 to 26 ....
No. 27 to 86 ....

Skills—Duty: Hi $ cent ad val.
Goat,Curacoa$ ft gold
87
35 @
Buenos

in

Champagne

Silk—Duty: free. All thrown silk
35 $1 oent
Tsatlees, No. 1 @3. $ ft 11 00 @11 50
Taysaams, superior,
No. I @
9 f0 @10 50
do medium,Nc3@4. 9 00 @10 00
Canton,re-reel.No 1 @2. 8 5j @ 8 75
1ft 50 @i3 Oft
Japan, superior
do
Medium
11 00 @11 t0
China thrown
14 0ft @18 Oft

do
do
do
do
do
do
do

75@

4 75@
4 T5&
3 5( @
8 50@

•

.

.

Wire—Duty: No. 0 to 18,uncovered
$2 to $3 5v $ 1001b,and 15 $ cent ad

ilj@

Buck

do
do

141

do

$1
bushel of
seeds, 30 39 cent

11 @
$ft
14
Timothy,reaped $ bus 3 «0 @ 8 25
CsDary
$ bus 4 60 @ 5 50
Linseed,Am.clean|ltee
@
do Ain. rough ^ bus 8 00 @ 3 10
do
Calcutta ...gold z 6: @ 2^70
Sliot—Duty; 21 cents $ ft.
Drop
$ ft .101®

65

18 @

dry

Zinc, white, American,
dry, No. 1
»
white, American,
No.
in oil

gold

ft; and grass

4

•

Sherry
d»
Malaga, sweet .
do
dry....
Claret in hhds.

8J

S|@

@
4 *5@
4 75@

bond)

Madeira
do Marseilles

15

ad val.
Clover

...

...

puie,

60

unbleach. 2 75 @
1 12 @ 1 15

Lard oil
Red oil, city distilled .
60 @
r 75 @
Bank
Straits
JO @
Paraffine, 28 — 80 gr..
45 @
Kerosene
(free).
..
@

partially refined, 3 cents;

@

5 (K @ 10 00
7 00
4 75@

(gold) 2 25
9?
Burgundy Port do
Sherry
do 1 90

i cent $ lb ; canary,

2 85 @ 2 40

Sperm,crude

Whisky ( n
Wines—Port

Seed*—Duty; linseed, 16 cts; hemp,

City thin obl’g, in bids.
# ton.55 09 @5'» 60
in bags.
do
@53 00
Wost. thin obl’g, do 51 00 @ ....
Oils - Duty: linseed, flaxseed, and
rape seed, 23 cents; olive and salad
oil, in bottles or flasks, $1; burning
fluid, 50 oents $ gallon; palm, seal,
and cocoa nut, 10 $ cent ad val.;

25 @

50 @
50 @

...

490@ 10 00
90@ 9 10

3 eo@
Gin —Differ, brands do
D* m c—N.E. Rum.cur. |....
Bourbon Whisky.cur.

52
52
^
.. @ S 0 I
240 ft bgs. 2 75 @ 3 00

Crude
Nitrate soda

5 75 @ 7 50
60 @ 63

eign fisheries,) 20 $ cent
Olive, qs(gokl;per case 6
do in casks.$ gall.. I
Palm
$ ft

42 @

nitrate soda,

Oakum—Duty fr.,$ ft
8@
Oil Cake—Duty: 20 $ cent ad val.

sperm

1 b(‘ @ l 90

OO
00
00

4

do
A. Seignette
.
Hlv. Pellevoisin do
Alex. Seignette. do
A rzac Seignette do
P Romlenx.... do
Ruin—Jamaica .. do
do
St. Croix

Saltpetre—Duty: crude, 2} cents;

Palo and Extra

do

@ 1 95
@ ....
@ 2 90
@ 2 00

1 cent $ 1b.
Refined, puro
1b

t$t

Pellevoisiu freres do

Liverpool,gr’nd$ sack 1 i*rt
do fln^,Ashton’s(4>’d) 2 60
do fine, Aorthingt’s 2 ©ft
Onondaga.com.tine bis. 2 50

refined and

9i

..

L*ger freres ... do
Other br’ds Cog. do

45

@

F. F

do
do
do
do
do

Renault A Co..
J. Vassal A Co.4
Jules Robin....
Marrette & Co.
> ine Grow; Co.

ft ;

Cadiz

do
do 210 ft bgs.
do
do
$ bush.
Solar coarse
Fine screened
do
pkg.

23

22 @

Yellow metal
Zinc

Barytes

pipe,

pipe, culls .120 00

Red oak,

'

100 00 @120 00

$ M.
pipe, hoavy
pipe, light.

£0
8

25 @
5@

Florida. $ c. ft.

47
Paints—Duty: on white lead, red
50
lead, and litharge, dry or ground in
21
oil, 3 cents $
? Paris white and
89
lb; dry ochres, 56
whiting, 1 cent
30
cent! $ 100 tb: oxidesofzinc, 14 cents
80)
jj9 lb ; ochre, ground in oil, | 50 $ 100
29*
ft ; Spanish brown 25 $ cel. t ad val •
291
China
clay, $5 $ ton; Venetian red
29j
and vermilion 25 $ cent ad val.;
29
white chalk, $10 $ ton.
29
111@ 12
Litharge, City.... $ ft
28
12

Woods, Staves,etc.
$ cent ad val.;

Spruce, East.

12

44 @

*

—Duty : Lumber, 20
Staves, 10 $ cent ad
and Cedar, frkk.

Mexican

46
46

Rockland, com. $ bbl.
heavy

12

8@
8 @

Mansanilla.....

Salt-Duty: sack, 24 cents $1 100
bulk, 18 oents $1 100 1b.
Turks Islands $1 bush.
42)@

2rt
12

88 @
4n @

Lime—Duty; 10 $ oent ad
do

Honduras

14 @
8 @

(gold)
&Co.do
P* n e t Castll. & Co.do

paddy 10 cents, and uncleaned 2 cents
V ftCarolina ....• # 100 ftll 50 @12 50
East India,dressed.... 9 25 @ 9 75

00
00

9
1>
13
4 75@ 17
5 00@ 16
.(fA

a am®
Martell (gold) 4
S0@

Henne8By
Otard, Dup.

6l@ 101
Rice—Duty: cleaned 24 cents $ lb.;

18 @
Naval Stores—Duty: spirits of
turpentine 30cents $ gallon; crude
Ttrpentine, rosin, pitch, aud tar, 20
$ cent ad val.
Tnrpent'e, • f ..^289Tb 5 00 @ ...
Tar, Am rici.
bbl 3 50 @ 4 50
Pi oh
4 00 @ 4 2j
Rosin, common
3 9* @ . ..
do strained andNo.2.. .4 o0 @ 4 25
do
No. 1
4 59 @ 5 :0

Double

Rails, Eng. (g’d)
do American

Mexican

J. A F.

$ lb

Hams,
Shoulders,

14
14
15

lo @
10 @
11 @

Nuevitas....
Man8anilla ..

Copper

# ton 40 P0@ 43 00

(in gold)

14

.

Holasses.—See special report.
Nails—Duty: cut 14; wrought 2);
horse shoe 2 cents
lb.
Cut, 4d.@60d. $ 10O lb 6 00 @
Clinch
7 5 > @ ...
Horse shoe, f’d(6d)$ft
28 @ 32
Horse* hoe, pressed ..
20 @ 22

Scotch,No 1.

sizes

10 @

Rosewood, R. Jan
Bahia
do

# 1b.

oents

40

do
do
do

(gold)

Manila

30 @

(American wood)..
Cedar, Nuevitas

65 @ 1 CO
Guatemala
(gold) 1 00 @ 1 2 >
.(gold) 75 @ t 0>
Caraooas
I roil—Duty, Bars, 1 to 1} cents $ ft.
Railroad, 70 cents $ 100 lb; Boiler
and Plate, 1} cents $1 ft; Sheet, Baud,
Hoop, and Scroll, 1} to 1J cents $ lb;
Pig, $9 $ ton; Polished Sheet, 3
.

crotches
do
Port-au-Platt,
do
do
do
do

(<old) #lb 1 05 @ 1 70
(«old) 75 @ 1 85
(gold) 60 @ 85

Bengal

7 @

Brandy—

19 00 @19 25
12)@ 1- 4
13i@ 14*

prime,

Lard,

10

ordinary logs
do
Port-au-Platt,

logs

85 @
@
@
,. @
@

$ lb

do

St. Domingo,

do

val.
Ox, Rio Grande... V O 10 60@ 10 25
Ox, American
8 00@ 10 00
India Rubber-Duty, 10 9 cent,

Horns—Duty, 10 9 cent, ad

ad vaL
Para, Fine

733

fHE CHRONICLE

8,1867.]

June

Oil
Flour
Petroleum
Beef

@25

bbl.

4 6

$ tee.
$ bbl.

Pork
Wheat
$
Corn
To Glasgow

Flour

.

..

@
@

0

...
...

@8

bush.

@

(By 8team) :

$ bbl.

..

@2 0

@
Corn,bulk and bags..
..
@
Petroleum (sad)^Dbl.
..
@4
Heavy goods..# ton► 15 0 @20
@30
Oil
Beef
# tee.
* @ 8
Pork
Sibbl. ..@2
To Havre:
$
Cotton
9
i@
Wheat

0

..@20
@
4}

$ bush.

..

4

5
6

0
0

0
0
$

bbl. 1 00
ton i0 tiO
*
5 601 0
Lard, tallow, eat m t

Beef and pork..®
Meaaurem. g’da.|l
Petroleum

jjkMt pot and

pearl

i.

8

00*31818

[June 8,1867.

TffiB CfiRQttlCLft

734

Miscellaneous.

Insurance.

Financial.

OFFICE OF THE

Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne
AND

Chicago Railway Co.

Mutual

Insurance

Pittsburgh, Pa., May 28th, 1867.

The

Trustees, in Conformity to the Charter of the
Company, submit the following Statement of its
affairs on the 31st December, 1866:
Premiums received on Marine Risks,
from 1st January, 1S66, to 31st De¬
cember, 1866
$8,282,021 26

SUBSCRIPTION TO NEW STOCK.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN, THAT IN PURSUof authority recently granted to the Board of
Directors of this Company, books of subscription will
be opened at the office of WINSLOW, LANIER & CO.,
New York, from the 20th to the 29th day of June next,
ance

Premiums
1st

inclusive, for the taking of 15,000 shares in the new
stock of the company, at 80 per cent, of its par value ;
20 per cent, of such par value, representing the amount

on

Policies not marked off

.$10,470,346 31
Life
Fire Risks discon¬

No Polices have been issued upon

Risks;

nor upon
nected with Marine Risks.

same

By order of the Board.
F. M. HUTCHINSON, Secretary.

Treasury, notice is hereby given that the Compound
Interest Notes, bearing date June 10th, 1864, and pay¬

able three years after (late, will now be received at this
office for redemption. Interest on the notes will cease
on their maturity, and holders will be paid in the order
of presentation, after verification of the amount
claimed to be due.
The notes must be put up in packages of one hun¬
dred, each denomination separately." Schedules may
be had on application at this office.
H. H. VAN DYCK,
Assistant Treasurer.

United States

Treasury.
JUNE 3,1857.

SCHEDULES

OF

THIRTY OR MORE 7-30
now be received for ex¬
the United States Treasury.
H. H. VAN DYCK,
(30)

Coupons due June 15th, will
amination at

Assistant Treasurer.

Files of this Paper
BLANK BOOKS,

Bound, to Order.

STATIONERY,
ENGRAVING,

Cooper & Sheridan,
26 EXCHANGE PLACE,
Corner of William St

ESTABLISHED 1844.

Springmeyer

Bros.,

LATE J. H. BELTER A CO.
Pine Rosewood Parlor Furniture,
Patent Rosewood Bedsteads,
Patent Rosewood Bureaus,
(one lock controlling four drawers).
Also, Rosewood, Black Walnut and Oak Library,
Dining and Bedroom Furniture.
No. 722 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

ALSO,
BUSINESS
DIRECTORIES of the
THIRTEEN PRINCIPAL COMMER¬
CIAL
CITIES—Tbe
CENTRES OF
TRADE-of the UNITED STATES.

Maine
every
Erinted,
usiness largefrom
octavo
pages,
to California,
indispensable
and to
from
the
man

Lakes to the Gulf.

PRICE ONLY

THREE DOLLARS PER COPY.

Returns of Premiums and

Smart, educated and business men wanted every¬
as Agents for this valuable work, which has

$1,194,173 23

where

.

The

any address, on receipt of Three
lars and Specimen pages free.

Company has the following As¬

T. D.

sets, viz.:

116 Nassau

Stock, City, Bank and other Stocks, $6,771,885
secured by Stocks, and other¬
wise
1,129,350
Real Estate and Bonds arid Mortgages,
221,260
Interest and sundry notes and claims
due the Company, estimated at
141,866
Premium Notes and Bills Receivable..
3,837,735
Cash in Bank
434,207
-

Financial.
00
00
24
41
81

THE

DeLery Gold Mining Co.
GENERAL

...-.

$12,536,304 46

No. 74 Cedar

No. 46 St.

Six per cent,

interest on tlie outstand¬
ing certificates of profits will be paid
to the holders thereof, or their legal representatives,
and

after

Tuesday tlie

Fiftb of

after

Tuesday the Fiftb of February
next, from which date all interest thereon will
The certificates to he

produced at the time

and cancelled.

Company has purchased

A dividend

of

Twenty Per Cent. Is
declared on tbe net earned premiums
of the Company, for tlie year ending: 31st
December, 1866, for which certificates will be
issued on and after Tuesday the Second of April

Prov i
will commence

Seigniory is 108 square miles, and the quartz veins
of unusual width and extent, furnishing a basis
for the profitable employment of large amounts of
capital in separate organizations: and as fast as the
Company’s surveys and tests snail show the best
local ions for new mills, they will furnish Maps and
propose liberal terms to parties desiring to develop
are

mines

on

their

ORGANIZED APRIL, 186 7.

$200,000

FARGO, President.

REYNOLDS, Vice President.

HENRY T. SMITH, Secretary.

Directors,

S. G. Cornell,
John C. Clifford,
A. Reynolds,
James N. Matthews,
Pascal P. Pratt,
James M. Smith,
Adrian R. Root,

By order of the Board,

Contracts

are

Richard Bullymore,
L. K. Plymnton,
James H. Metcalfe,
John Greiner,
James Braylev,
O. P. Ramsdefl,
Lauren Enos,

Henry Martin,
George W. Tift,

S. S. Guthrie,
C. J. Hamlin,
O. L. Nims,
John H. Vouglit,
James Adams.

CHAPMAN,

Sturgis,
Henry K. Bogert,

Jones,
Charles Dennis,
W. H. H; Moore,
Henry Coit,
Wm. C.

Joshua J.

Pickersgill,

Lewis

Curtis,
Charles II. Russell,
Lowell Holbrook,
R. Warren Weston,
Royal Phelps,
Caleb Barstow
A. P. Pillot
William E.

Dodge
Hobson,
David Lane,
James Bryce,
Geo. G.

Francis

J. M. WINCHELL,
General

Manager.

Quebec, April 26,1867.

National Trust Company
OF THE

Henry,
Dennis Perkins,
Joseph Gaillard, Jr.
J. Henry Burgy,
Cornelius Grinnell,
C. A. Hand,
B. J. Howland,
Benj. Babcock,
Fletcher Westray,
Robt B. Mintnrn, Jr.
Gordon W, Burnham,
Frederick Chauncey,

of Opening of Books of Sub¬
scription to tbe Capital Stock.

At a meeting of the Trustees of the National
Trust Company of the City of New York, held at
the temporary office, No. 363 Broadway, on the

Eighth day of May inst., the undersigned were ap¬
subscription
Capital Stock of said Company.
Notice is hereby given, pursuant to the Charter,
that the book3 for subscription to the Capital Stock
of s >id National Trust Company wi'l be opened at
pointed a committee to open books for
to tae

the Ninth National Ba >k, 363 Broadway, comer of
Franklin Street, in the City of New York, on the
•.2d day of M«y, 1867, and will remain open until the
whole amount of Capital Stock of one million dol¬
lars shall be subscribed.

ELISHA A PACKER,
THOMAS W. SHANNON,
THOMAS T. REaD,
JOSEPH U. ORVIS,
HENRY C. CA TER,

George S. Stephenson,
William H. Webb.

Skiddy,

Dated NewYork, M

Paul

Spoflord.
Charles P. Burdett,
Robert L. Taylor,
Shephard Gandy.

YOUR

CUSTOM

CHARLES

W. H. H.
.

J. D, HEWLETT, 8d Vice-Pres t.

Commissioners.

SOLICITED

Francis &

BY

Loutrel,

STATIONERS, PRINTERS AND

BLANK-BOOK

MANUFACTURERS.

DENNIS, Vice-President

MOORE, 2d Vice-Pres

■

9, 1867.

'

; JOHN D. JONES, President,

.

Notice

James Low

Daniel 8. Miller.

FIRE AND INLAND NAVIGATION
BISKS AT CURRENT RATES.

Office In New York, No. 6 Pine Street.
CHARLES W. STAND ART Agent.

now

Full information can be obtained at either office
of the Company, or of the local agent, Mr. Trumun
Coman, on the property.

Wm.

John D.

This Company has just organized with paid fp CAsn
Capital, as above, and have established an Agency in
this city, and are prepared to write




account.

€ITY OF NEW YORK.

OF BUFFALO

Stephen G. Austin,
Wm. H. Glenny,

own

being nnide for the w iking of Placer Min^s, which
have already been abundantly proven to be of great

next.

J. H.

BuffaloCity InsuranceCo.

Wm. G. Fargo,
Rufus L. Howard,
Dexter P. Rumsey,
John Allen, Jr.,
Peter J. Ferris,

all the Mineral
Rigaud-Vaudreui', in the
about the first of June,
practical operations by making min¬

richness.

TRUSTEES :

WM. O.

Quebec.

on the Seigniory of
ce of Quebec ; and

Insurance.

A.

Peter Street,

survey#, by shafting and tunnelling the
quartz ledges, and bv testing the quality of t .e rock
in their Stamp Mill, just completed. The area of the

outstanding certificates of tlie issue of
1864 will be redeemed and paid to the holders
thereof, or their legal representatives, on and

of payment,

Rights

Secretary.

Paid in

AND

eral ogical

February next.

cea&e.

This

OFFICES:

Street, New York,

*

on

Street, N. Y.

00

Loans

Total Amount of Assets

Dollars. Circu¬

KELLOGG,

United States and State of New York

Factory, 3d Avenue, corner of 76th St.

Cash Capital

Specimen copies sent post paid to

no competitor.

The

PRINTING,. &C., &C.

Contains:
Law, Internal Tax and Tarift
Rates, as amended March 2, 1867; Weights, Measures
and Monies of Foreign Countries; complete list of Post
Offices, Telegraph Stations. Money Order Offices, &c.,
in the United States.; Population of States, Territories
Counties, Cities, and Villages in the United States, in
1850, ’60, ’65; General and Commercial Statistics ; sum¬
mary of Laws of the several States, relating to all
matters of business Interest; Commercial Regulations
of the principal ports of the United States, &c., &c., &c.
United States Bankrupt

paid during the
period
$5,683,S95 05

Expenses

NEW YORK, June 5,1S437.
REDEMPTION OF COMPOUND INTEREST NOTES.
Under the
directions from the Secretary of the

$7,632,236 70

1866 to 31st December, 1866

Losses

FOR 1867-8.

The whole In a simple and convenient form, constitu*
ting a work of general reference of a thousand closely

Premiums marked off from 1st Janu¬
ary,

Mercantile Regis ter

2,188,325 15

January. 1866

Total amount of Marine Premiums.

of Donds redeemed by the Sinking Fund, being credit¬
ed to the subscribers.
Those who are registered as shareholders on the 10th
day of June will possess the privilege of subscribing
to the extent of 15 per cent, of the shares then stand¬
ing In their names. Such 80 per cent, will be payable
In cash at the time of subscription. No fractional
'shares will be issued. Certiticates for such new stock
will be ready for delivery during the month of July.
The transfer books will close on said 10th day of June
at 3 o’clock P.M., and will reopen on the morning of
the 17th June next.

Treasury,

Co.,

NEW YORK, JANUARY 25th, 1867,

OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY,

United States

Kellogg’s

Atlantic

45 Maiden Lane,

New York.

supply everything in our line for Business, Pro¬
fessional and Private use, at Low Prices. Orders re*
ceive prompt attention.
We

& Go.,

S. H. Pearce

Agent for S.

Importers of

of

Linen

COTTON HANDKERCHIEFS,

SILK AND

Oiled

Wm.

Importers of

GOODS,

Muslin

Goods,

Cotton,
Organzlnc Silk,

Edgings,

Real Brussels

Tram Silk.

Laces,

Railroad Material.
,

Corsets, Ac.
73 LEONARD

Goods,

Handk’fs,

British and

Duane St., to No. 94

Consignments solicited on the usual
terms of any ol the Staples.

New York, May

facilities usually

AMERICAN AGENTS,

TYNG A

Manufacturer of

COMPANY,
New York.

Broadway,

184

CORSETS, SKIRT MATERI¬
ALS, WEBBINGS, BINDINGS BED
LACE, COTTON YARNS, Ac.,

Embroidery,
Organzine, and Tram.
CHAMBERS ST., NEW YORK.
MILLS AT

PATERSON, N. J.

Woolen

234 CHURCH STREET,

M. K.

Jesup & Company,

BANKERS AND MERCHANTS,
12 PINE STREET.

Co.,

Son,

MANUFACTURERS OF

No. 335

Negotiate
Bonds and Loans
Contract for
Iron or

SUPERIOR MACHINE TWIST AND
SEWING SILKS,

W. D. Sihonton.

Treas.

NEW YORK.

Wm. G. Watson &

CHURCH ST., NEW YORK.

W. W. Coffin,

available

Spacious Counting and Reception Rooms

John Graham,

Machine Twist

198 & 200

Continent.

WOVEN

Sewing Silks,

Globe

1st, 1S67.

provided for United States or

for Americans in London, with the
found at the Continental Bankers.

MANUFACTURERS OF

84

DUNDEE

OF

Continental.

John O’Neill & Sons,

J

Railroad Bonds and United States and other Amer¬
ican Securities negotiated, and Credit and Exchange

Has removed from 125 and 127
Read Street.

6

Linen

James Smieton,LINENS,

IMPORTER

Emb’s,

L<aces and

LANGHAM PLACE, LONDON, W.

RAILROAD
IRON,
BESSEMER .
RAILS, STEEL TYKES A METALS.

REMOVAL.

Importers of
White

Smith,

A.

Gilead

STREET, NEW YORK.

15

FRANKLIN STREET, NEW YORK,

only.

Oifer to Jobbers

Goods,

Imitation Laces,

Co.,

STREET.

Agents for the Glasgow Thread Company’s
SPOOL
COTTON.
Also Agents for
MACHINE AND SEWING SILK, BUTTON-HOLE
*
TWIST, FANCY GOODS, &C.

Swiss A French White

Oiled

70 & 72

MERCHANTS,

119 CHAMBERS

Draperies,

Machine

H’dkffl,
Oiled Silk,

Cotton

Co.,

Holt &

C.

OF

Lace Curtains.

H’dkt's,

New York

Street,

Church

COMMISSION

LEONARD
IMPORTER AND MANUFACTURER OF

-

LINENS,

185

No.

& Co-,

Delisle

French Dress

58

George Pearce &

IRISH

LINENCAMB’C HANDK’FS, AC.

CORNER FRANKLIN STREET.

IMPORTERS

John N. Stearns,
STRFET,

NEW YORK.

Thompson & Co.,

and

Offers a new Stock of the above at
86-i BROADWAY

Oscar

Keversible Paper Collars.
most economical collar ever invented.

Patent

Pongee

Nos. 12 & 14 WARREN STREET,

MEN’S FURNISHING

appearance and durability.
Agents for the sale of the

PARASOLS,

Camhric, Madder, Turkey Red

HOSIERY

IMITATION,” has a very superior finish, and
half as much as real silk, which it equals in

J

UMBRELLAS AND

HAN DKERCIIIEFS,

Sillt,

costs hut

the

Conrtanld A Co.’s

and Lawn

Imitation Oiled Silk.
Our “

Manufacturers of

ENGLISH CRAPES,
And importer of

CHINA SILKS,

and Manufacturers

Byrd & Hall,

Napier,

(late of Becar, Napier & Co.)

BROADWAY,

EUROPEAN ANi)

D.

Alexander

Cards.

Commercial

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

No. 353

735

THE CHRONICLE.

S, 1&67.]

June

for Railroad Cos.,

Steel Ralls, Locomotives,

Cars, etc.,
and undertake

all business

connected with Railways.

BROADWAY, NEW YORK.

WORKS PATERSON, N. J.

Cassimeres.

Fancy

Railroad Iron,

Silk Mixtures,

Beavers.

Brand & Gihon,

Langley & Co.,

Wm. C.

FOR

Importers A Commission

IRISH A SCOTCH LINEN

TO

17 & 19

FOR SALE BY

GOODS,

69 & 71

Thomas

WILLIAM GIHON & SONS’

E. R. Mudge, Sawy er&Co.

LINENS,

WHITE

AGENTS FOR

METALS.
292 PEARL STREET,

FLAX SAIL

DECK, AC.

Nos. 43 A 45

MILLS,

WHITE STREET.

Lindsay, Chittick & Co.,
AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,

IMPORTERS
British

Staple,

Commission Merchants,

198 A 200 CHURCH

STREET,

SCOTCH AND IRISH LINEN GOODS,
SPANISH LINEN, DUCKS, DRILLS,
LINEN CHECKS, &c., WHITE GOODS,
PATENT LINEN THREAD.
Sole Agents for

DICKSON, FERGUSON A CO., Belfast,
And F. W. HAYES A CO., Ranbridge.

And Fancy
Stress

George Hughes & Co.,
Importers A

Goods,

Miscellaneous.
Fixtures, Kerosene Oil Lamps,
Chandeliers of every Description.

Gas

John Horton & Co.,
MANUFACTORY AND SHOW ROOMS,

233

TO

LINEN

Linens, Ac., Ac*,
DUANE STREET, NEW YORK.

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,




We are

GOODS.

Strachan & Malcomson,
IIMPORTERS AND

MANUFACTURERS’ AGENTS
'•

IRISH AND

SCRIBE, PARIS,

STREET, NEW YORK.

MILLERS,

SHIPPERS,

l

Corn

Shelters,

Of ail sizes and capacity, ranging from 60 to 1,000
bushels per hour; built of Iron, and
to
shell clean in any condition of grain, and clean the
corn in superior condition for the
or
Over 500 in Daily Use. Portable Engines, Small

warranted

Mill

Market.

Mills, Farm Mills, Ac.
RICHARDS’ IRON WORKS.

Burr

FOR

SCOTCH LINENS,

40 Murray Street, New

.

Manufacturing

Richards’ Power

Lane, Lamson & Co.,
97 FRANKLIN

GRAIN

CANAL STREET,

Street, opposite Earle’s Hotel.

AND DISTILLERS.

Goods,
Irish and Scotch

NO. 7 RUE

235

A

Corner of Centre

White

150 & 152

NEAR BEEKMAN STREET,

NEW YORK.

CHICOPEE MANUF. CO.,

CO.,

J. Pope & Bro.

AC.

BURLAPS, BAGGING,

BURLINGTON WOOLEN CO.,

MILTON

Broadway.

A

Agents for the sale of

VICTORY MANUF.

Co.,

S. W. HOPKINS A

Jobbing and Clothing Trade.

NEW YORK.

WASHINGTON MILLS,

Roads,

Steam and Street

In fall assortment for the

OF

WHITE STREET, WEST

CHURCH STREET,

Merchants,

55 MURRAY STREET.

Removed from 139 Duane St.

Have

AMERICAN AND FOREIGN,

York,

.

190 &

i

92

WASHINGTON STREET.

Chicago} Ill,

*

[June 8, 1867,

THE CHRONICLE.

Commercial Cards.

Commercial Cards.

Safes.

WILSON, SON & €0
IMPORTANT

JOS. H. WILSON,

TO

ROBT. N. WILSON,
Late of L-vnckburar. Va

Merchants.

mmmmmmtm

-J

COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

and

NO. 47 BROAD STREET,

Baltimore, Md.

offer for the consideration

of Bank

Merchants and those desiring the best
proof security the fallowing certificates:

burglar

This Company
ers,

Ofitce op the Novelty Iron
New York, 18th December,

Mclllvaine

al

Bank, Lynchburg, Va.

Lillie & Son,
Gentlemen,—We have subjected the sample of
double-chilled iron you furnished us to the most se¬
vere tests (as regards drilling through it) we cuuld
bring to bear upon it, and w thont success.
It is our opinion that it can only be penetrated by
the use of a large number of drills, and the expen¬
diture of much power with dayB of time,
think it impossible foi a burglar with his
power to penetrate it at all.
Yours truly,
ISAAC V. HOLMES.
LYMAN G. HALL,

Anderson &

SEEDS

GRAIN,

FLOVBy

f

U66.

AND

Messrs. Lewis

-

NEW TORE.

33 PARK PLACE,

Works, }

NEW YORK.

KIRK Sc SON, BELFAST,

Linen Manufacturers.

Blair, Densmore & Co.,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,

Smith,

Agents for

PROVISIONS.
WILLIAM

and we

^

*

Note Brokers.
Warehouse and office corner of Lombard and Freder¬
ick streets, No. 39 East End, Exchange Place,

Refer to D. Sprigg, cashier; J. Sloan, Jr., cashier, Bal¬
timore, Md. And by permission to Jacob Heald &
Co., Lord & Robinson, Balt.; Tannahill,
& Co., N. Y.; Ambrose Rucker, President 1st Nation¬

■

Sawyer, Wallace & Co.,

A1p.vandrift.Vft

Stock,

Produce,

Merchandise,

Bankers &

PETER WISE,
Late of Richmond,

T?Armpr 1 v nf

■ > " ■■■■—

—mmmmmmm——— " ■■■ ——

i

736

CO., LURGAN,

JAMES GLASS Sc

Cambric Handkerchief Manufacturers

time and

STREET.

WASHINGTON

165

Snpt.

Foreman.

Duck,

Cotton

Chicago, Ills.

All Widths and

Weights.

Large Stock always on hand.
THEODORE POLHEMUS A CO
MANUFACTURERS AND DEALERS,
A

Hinkley AND

Wit LTAMS Works,

Boston, Msss-, January 22,

)
1867. l-

We having made an attempt to drill a sample o
double chilled iron furnished ns by Messrs. Lillie <fc
Son, and failed to penetrate it more than
(%) of an inch, after hours of labor, leel that we can
endorse the above Novcity Iron Works’ certificate
in all particulars.
JARVIS WILLIAMS, Treasurer.

Yaeger & Co.,

five-eighths

148,150,152,154 and 150 N. SECOND

AND GREEN

Philadelphia, Pa.,

ST.

me

continued operation of the most
best tools.
\ ery truly,

hanics and the

skilltul

Foremen in Messrs.
-

Merrick & Son’s Southworth

Foundry, Philadelphia, Pa.

CHICAGO, ILL.,

PROPRIETORS OF

Lockport, Ill.
West Lockport. HI.
supply of our well known brands
of Flour

Office Union Foundry

made of

be impossible for burglars to enter the safes
this metil by means of the drill during the longest
time in ordinary business they coaid have access to

Mills,

always on

being situated

all points Fast, saving ex¬
pense and damage from cartage.
Orders lor pur¬
chase of Grain, Flour, or provisions in this market
will be faithfully a

tended to.

E. W. Blatchford

nished us (of a new
need in the manufacture of
verest tests of our Powr r

Lillie’s Safesi to the se¬
Drill, and with the best

tempered drills oar skill and

experience could pro¬

duce.
After operating upon it with different
seve¬
ral hours without penetrating it more than half an
inch and at that point unable to make further pro¬

drills

became satisfied that if not utterly im¬
penetrable, it would at least require days of time, a
large number of drills and machine power to pene¬
trate through it: and that it was entirely out of the
\ ower of even the most skilful burglar to penetrate
gress, we

*

I. S. Bush &
HIDE

AND

Orders will receive

Co.,

Chicago.

Cummins,

L.

A.

M E M P H I S

,

TENNESSEE.

Burnham

CINCINNATI,
Special attention given to

Wm. G.
AND

Burglar-

merits of onr Safes.




LEWIS

LILLIE, President.

BROADWAY, NEW TORE.

DISTILLERS
AND

Offer for sale, IN

MERCHANTS,

STREET, NEW YORK,

BOND, fine BOURBON and RYE

and other first-class Dis¬

Henry Lawrence & Sons,
MANUFACTURERS OF CORDAGE

192 FRONT

England & Co.,

65 Commerce Street,

AND DOMESTIC USE,
STREET, NEW YORK.

Mobile, Ala.

CLARK, Jr. A
Mile End, Glasgow.

REST

CABLED

SIX-CORD

Thread.
JOHN

Sic

HUGH

AUCHINCLOS8,

SOLE AGENTS IN NEW

GO’S.

FOR HAND AND MACHINE

-SEWING.

Sole Agent,
STREET, N.Y.

THUS. RUSSELL,

J. & P. Coats’

MERCHANTS,

Spool Cotton.
18 UNSURPASSED

58 BROAD

filling orders for Spinners.

58 CHAMBERS

191

J. M. Cummings & Co.,

FOR EXPORT

OHIO.

GENERAL COMMISSION

JOHN

Lillie Safe & Iron Co.,

Mills at Patterson^ N. J.

tilleries, Kentucky.

€')TTON FACTORS
f;

of these unequalled

Threads,

WHISKIES, from their own

BROKER,

COTTON

BURGLAR PROOF

A fall assortment

STREET, NEW YORK,

COMMISSION

COTTON BROKER,

proof Safes oonstantiy on band at our W arerooms.
Also, safes of every description, designed f<*r both
Fre and Bur.-lar-proof security. The public are in¬
vited to call and examine for themselves as to the

Umbrellas & Parasols,

careful and prompt attention.

Erastus

Safes.

MANUFACTURERS OF

BARBOUR BROTHERS,
YORK.

BROKERS,

155 Kinzie Street,

Lillie’s
FIRE

DOUBLEDAV Sc DWIGHT,

CHAMBERS STREET, NEW

CRANE, President.

WROUGHT IRON

CO., No. 903 Broadway.

JOHN F. TROW. No. 52 Greene St.

SHOE THREADS,
SEWING-MACHINE THREADS, ETC.

SHEET LExAD,

CHICAGO, ILL.

...

DOUBLE CHILLED AND

R. G. DUN &
or

Linen

LINSEED OIL AND OIL CAKE,

cafe made of this material

R. T.

lishers,

& Co.,

Manufacturers of

f

fur¬
combination of metals to be

having business relations throughout
Copies for sale at the office of the pub¬

49 MURRAY

Man’, ’g Co., 1

Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample you

the country.

-

Middlings, Bran, &c., to

LEAD PIPE AND

Chicago, March 11,1867.
Messrs. MurrAy & Winnk,
Agents Lillie Safe and Iron Co.,

band.

Eastern orders will have prompt attention at low
est market price.
Our Chicago mills
on the railroad track cars are loaded with Flour,

them—iu tact, that the metal is proof against the
drill.
Truly your?,
N. S. BOUTON & CO.

Office of Northwesterv

beg to announce a Second Edition, wh-ch
ready for delivery. This work is the largest
Directory ever issued in the United States, nnd'orras
a complete classified list of nearly all the traders,
dealers, and manufacturers, not only in all the large
cities of the Union, bul in almost every town, village,
and hamlet in the Union. It is an invaluable work
now

for all persons

Chicago, Ill.

Mills,
Lockport Hydraulic
Sweepstakes Mills,

Oriental

A flull

Works, |
Chicago, Ill., March 13, 1S67.
J
Messrs. Murray & Winnk,
Agents Liilie Safe and Iron Co.,
Gentlemen,—We subjected the sample of new
combination of metals for safes sent us by yon to
as thorough tesfs uf the drill as we could, and fail¬
ed to penetrate the metal at all. We think it won d

Co.,

(Established 1843.)
MILLERS & COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
138 LASALLE ST.,

W. H. BECH1ELL,
W. H. 8TRAHAN,

few days of its issue, the pub¬

a

lishers
is

Norton &

Agency.

The first edition of the above work having been

MO.

LOUIS,

Beaver

United States Business Directory..

STREET.

Meisrs. Lewis

by a long

Street, corner of

exhausted within

February 25,1867.

LtLLiE & Son,
Gentlemen,—We have tried a sample of doublechilled iron similar to that sent to the Novelty
Works, New York, and our experience with it is
about the same, viz : that it can only be penetrated

STREET,

AVENUE

BETWEEN WASHINGTON

Broad

The Mercantile

RECEIVERS OF FLOUR,
Nos.

69

No. 108 Dnane

Ould &

YORK.*,

Street.

Carrington,
AT LAW,

ATTORNEYS

11.3 MAIN STREET,
RICHMOND, VA.